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Pete Ballmer votes while his dogs Poppy, center, and Lilah wait at International Cafe on Nov. 4, 2025, in San Francisco. (AP) Pete Ballmer votes while his dogs Poppy, center, and Lilah wait at International Cafe on Nov. 4, 2025, in San Francisco. (AP)

Pete Ballmer votes while his dogs Poppy, center, and Lilah wait at International Cafe on Nov. 4, 2025, in San Francisco. (AP)

Grace Abels
By Grace Abels November 5, 2025
Amy Sherman
By Amy Sherman November 5, 2025

White House evidence doesn’t prove Trump statement that California “rigged” election

If Your Time is short

  • As evidence, the White House said California’s system of sending mail ballots to all voters is "ripe for fraud." A spokesperson pointed to one case of a woman charged with voter fraud. In its statement, the White House also misrepresented data.

  • Noncitizen voting is banned under federal law and rarely occurs. 

  • Rigging an election would require a criminal conspiracy of election officials across the state. There is no evidence that happened. 

As Californians voted Nov. 4 for a new congressional map, President Donald Trump falsely said the process was rigged.

"The Unconstitutional Redistricting Vote in California is a GIANT SCAM in that the entire process, in particular the Voting itself, is RIGGED," Trump wrote Nov. 4 on Truth Social

"All ‘Mail-In’ Ballots, where the Republicans in that State are ‘Shut Out,’ is under very serious legal and criminal review. STAY TUNED!"  

A reporter asked White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt for Trump’s evidence that the election was rigged. 

"It is just a fact," Leavitt said. "They have a universal mail in voting system, which we know is ripe for fraud. …Fraudulent ballots that are being mailed in, in the names of other people and the names of illegal aliens who shouldn't be voting in American elections."

Democratic California state officials, including Gov. Gavin Newsom and Secretary of State Shirley Weber, challenged Trump’s assertion. "Where exactly is this fraud? Ramblings don’t equate with fact," Weber said.  

When PolitiFact contacted the White House, a spokesperson responded with several points, many of which had also been shared in an X post. These points criticized California’s voting system, but included only one case of a person charged with voter fraud. The White House also misrepresented the numbers on voter registration and voter removal to support its claims. 

Trump has repeatedly spread falsehoods about "rigged" elections, including in California. Rigging a state election would require election officials across the state to work together to commit felonies. There is no evidence that happened.

What did happen: The blue state overwhelmingly voted to redistrict the congressional map to increase the chance of adding five Democratic seats to negate added likely Republican seats in Texas.

White House evidence does not prove the election was rigged

Vote by mail system: Much of the White House’s evidence criticizes California’s system of mailing ballots to all active registered voters. It is one of eight states that conduct elections by such a system. Millions of ballots are sent to Californians and not returned, as the White House noted, but that doesn’t prove fraud. Election workers verify identity by matching signatures on the mail ballot envelopes with the registration records.

Although voters are mailed ballots, they can choose to cast a ballot in person instead. Voters generally don’t have to provide an ID. Election workers can ask for an ID if the person is voting for the first time and didn’t provide an ID when registering to vote. 

The White House cherry picked one sentence from a 2005 bipartisan report that said, "Absentee ballots remain the largest source of potential voter fraud." Although the report generally communicated a dim view of absentee voting, it didn’t call for its elimination. It recommended ways to improve security and further study. 

Noncitizen voters: The White House said, "San Francisco allows non-citizens to vote in local elections which creates a high risk of fraud in federal elections," and acknowledged noncitizens aren’t allowed to vote in federal elections. The city allows noncitizens to vote only in school board elections.

The Justice Department sued Orange County in June after it redacted personal identifying information when it provided records to the department about 17 noncitizens on the voter rolls. 

Bob Page, the county registrar of voters, said the 17 people self-reported that they wanted to cancel their voter registrations, including eight who voted before they cancelled their voter registration.

Duplicate registrations: "California reported 2,178,551 duplicate registrations in the 2024 election cycle — 15.6% of total registered voters," the White House said. 

The statement misleadingly gives the impression that those people appear on the voter rolls more than once. "Duplicate registrations" refer to the number of registration applications that California election officials received but didn’t process because they were identical to existing registrations. Duplicate registration can happen by accident; some people register and forget they did so, or submit registration both through the mail and online.

The number the White House cited represents the number of times California election officials caught the mistake, not made one. 

The number comes from a 2024 national survey on voting activity and election administration between 2022 and 2024 by the bipartisan U.S. Election Assistance Commission.

The national average for duplicate applications is 12.7%.

Removing voters after death: The White House said, "California only removed 378,349 registered voters for death (11.9%), which was well below the national average," between the 2022 and 2024 elections. 

This figure is cherry picked. The White House cited voters removed because of death, which is just one reason for striking a voter from the rolls. 

From 2022 to 2024, California removed more than 3.177 million voters from its rolls for all reasons, including death, according to the same election survey. That’s a 12.4% removal rate of all registered voters, compared with the national average of 9.1%. 

California removed a larger proportion of voters for reasons other than death, such as moving or failure to return a confirmation notice.

Voter fraud: The White House pointed to one woman charged with voter fraud.

In September, authorities charged a woman from Costa Mesa, California, with five felonies for illegally registering her dog to vote. The dog’s vote was counted in the 2021 gubernatorial recall election, but rejected in the 2022 primary. The Orange County District Attorney’s office said the woman "self-reported that she had registered her dog to vote." 

Laura Lee Yourex, 62, said she wanted to prove a point about flaws in the state voting system, according to her lawyer. 

The conservative Heritage Foundation’s voter fraud database shows 69 cases in California between 1982 and 2025. The database shows dozens of cases in red states such as Florida, which does not send a mail ballot to all voters. 

Our ruling

Trump said voting in California is "rigged."

The White House’s explanation misrepresented data about duplicate registrations, cherry-picked data about dead voter removals from registration rolls, pointed to one woman charged with voter fraud among about 23 million registered voters, and baselessly blamed San Francisco’s allowance for noncitizen voting in school board elections.

The White House did not prove California voting is "rigged." We rate Trump’s statement Pants on Fire!

PolitiFact researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this fact-check.

RELATED: Trump's actions could affect the 2026 midterm elections. What will it mean for voters?

Our Sources

President Donald Trump, Truth Social post, Nov. 4, 2025

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, X post, Nov. 4, 2025

Roll Call, ​​Press Briefing: Karoline Leavitt Holds a Press Briefing at The White House, Nov. 4, 2025

U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, Complaint, June 25, 2025

California Secretary of State, Election results, Nov. 4, 2025

California Secretary of State Shirley N. Weber, Press release, Nov. 4, 2025

California Secretary of State, What to Bring to Your Polling Place and Voting by Mail, Accessed Nov. 5, 2025

Gov. Gavin Newsom, X post, Nov. 4, 2025

Orange County Registrar of Voters, USA v. Page, Case No.: 8:25-cv-01370-DOC-ADS, 2025

San Francisco, Non-citizen voting rights in local Board of Education elections, Accessed Nov. 5, 2025

Heritage Foundation, Voter fraud map, 1982-2025

Los Angeles Times, Justice Department sues Orange County registrar for access to noncitizen voting records, June 25, 2025

PolitiFact, Trump wrongly says Jimmy Carter said ‘don’t ever use’ mail ballots, Nov. 4, 2022

PolitiFact, No, California Is Not Sending Mail-In Ballots "To Anyone In The State," As Trump Falsely Claimed, May 26, 2020

White House, Statement to PolitiFact, Nov. 5, 2025

Email interview, Bob Page, Orange County Registrar of Voters, Nov. 5, 2025

NBC Los Angeles, "Costa Mesa woman registered dog to vote to ‘prove a point,' attorney says," Sept. 10, 2025

U.S. Election Assistance Commission, "2024 Election Administration and Voting Survey," Nov. 2024

U.S. Election Assistance Commission, "2024 Election Administration Policy Survey," Aug. 2024

U.S. Election Assistance Commission, "Studies and Reports," accessed Nov. 5, 2025

U.S. Election Assistance Commission, Election Administration and Voting Survey 2024 Comprehensive Report," June 2025

U.S. Election Assistance Commission, "EAVS Datasets Version 1.0 (released June 30, 2025)," downloaded Nov. 5, 2025 

U.S. Election Assistance Commission, "Policy Survey Version 1.0 (released June 30, 2025)," downloaded Nov. 5, 2025

Department of Justice, "Complaint - United States v Shirley Weber and State of California," Sept. 25, 2025

Orange County District Attorney, "Costa Mesa Woman Charged with Five Felonies for Illegally Registering Her Dog to Vote," Sept. 5, 2025

 

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White House evidence doesn’t prove Trump statement that California “rigged” election

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