An early voting centre in North Carolina.
Most US states have laws requesting or requiring voter ID. Image by Erik S. Lesser/EPA PHOTO

No, viral photo does not show a Canadian’s vote for Trump

Soofia Tariq October 30, 2024
WHAT WAS CLAIMED

Image shows a Canadian voted in the US presidential election.

OUR VERDICT

False. The image has been miscaptioned and was originally posted by a US voter.

AAP FACTCHECK – An image supposedly showing a Canadian having crossed the border and voted in the US election is not what it claims to be.

The image was originally posted on social media by a US account, but has been repurposed by other users, spreading misinformation about the presidential election.

Facebook users posted the claim amid early voting being open in many states, ahead of the November 5 election.

“I am Canadian but USA doesn’t require voter Id so figured I would drive across the border and vote”, the posts claim, along with a photo of a presidential ballot with Donald Trump selected. 

One of the Facebook posts spreading the falsehood.
 The image of a filled ballot is doing the rounds on various social media platforms. 

However, AAP FactCheck traced the image back to an American woman’s October 13 X post  using a reverse image search.

This post is captioned: “I’m voting for the candidate who chooses Americans over illegals.” 

The user’s profile says she is a content creator, with her location listed as North Carolina, and she makes no mention of being Canadian.

X post showing woman's vote for Trump on ballot.
 The original image was posted to X on October 13. 

While the image in the Facebook posts has cropped out the woman’s finger, it still matches the original image as the shadows and creases in the ballot paper are the same. 

The ballot circle is filled out identically and a crease in the paper is in the same position underneath candidate Claudia De la Cruz’s name. 

The shadow is also identical. The top part of the shadow goes through Trump’s name, while the side dissects the “DEM” next to Kamala Harris’s name in both images.

The original poster also responded to one of the fake versions on X, posting: “This is a cropped photo of my ballot.”

The original poster responding to a fake post.
 The person who originally posted the image has responded to one of the fakes on X. 

The claim in the Facebook posts that the US doesn’t require voter identification is mostly false.

Most states do require some sort of ID verification before allowing you to cast a vote. 

Posting photos of a completed ballot or a “ballot selfie” is also illegal in some states, for example in New York and Nevada, and penalties may apply.

Snopes has also debunked this claim.

The Verdict

False – The claim is inaccurate.

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