NJ, The Cheat Is On
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It looks like this person was provided a provisional ballot. You can tell because of 2 things:
Regular ballots are always counted and go into a normal ballot box.
This is not as nefarious as it seems. A provisional ballot gets set aside for higher-up election authorities to figure out, and for candidate campaigns to dispute. There they figure out if the voter was actually allowed to vote or not. It could be that there was an honest mistake in the pollbook which prevented a voter from being able to vote normally on election day, in which case that vote will count. But for someone that's not registered and not a citizen, they'll determine that that voter is ineligible, and the ballot will not count.
Anyone who shows up at a polling place that cannot be given a normal ballot for any reason can be given a provisional ballot. It's a way for election workers to 1) deescalate conflict with the voter, and 2) pass the buck up the chain.
An election worker cannot just tell someone they can't vote, which is the outcome the video poster wanted to see. It doesn't matter if the person is a noncitizen. That opens up liability for possibly denying someone their right to vote. The best they can do is offer a provisional ballot which will get thrown away later for people ineligible to vote.
As someone who has done election work before (trained in 2020 and once again just recently,) what you just described is absolutely correct.
I am so glad you explained it. Now next question, how or where do you store the provisional from getting into the system?
The details vary a little bit depending on the state.
In my state, regular ballots go directly into the ballot box on election day and on early voting days. They get all mixed together so they are all counted.
The provisionals are in individual envelopes and in a separate container. The envelope identifies the provisional voter and the circumstances of why they were voting provisional. A few days after the election, the higher-ups evaluate the circumstances of each provisional voter to see whether or not the vote should count. This process is open to the public to attend and observe. A few disqualifiers include not being eligible to vote, voting in the wrong place, trying to vote more than once, etc. if the provisional voter is disqualified, the envelope is not opened and the ballot is not counted. If the voter is qualified to vote, then the envelope is opened and the ballot counted.
All ballots whether they be regular, provisional, or uncounted are stored in separate boxes for a few years in case there's ever a legal challenge to the election results.