Here's the thing, though: Those are 1.5 million inactive registrations, which means the person hasn't voted, nor has anyone voted fraudulently under their registration. (No vote=no fraud). And those aren't illegal immigrants, because they were at one point valid registrations-the person either moved, died, or became disinterested in politics, so they're cleaning those up to prevent future fraud, and also just for the sake of keeping the database current.
According to that factcheck.org link, studies show that voter fraud by impersonation (dead people voting) is really hard and uncommon- they've found like 30 cases total in the past few decades.
Their systems always flag a bunch of suspect votes (as they should), then when they look through them, it almost always turns out to be something such as: the person voted by absentee ballot before election day, then died, but their vote was still counted because they voted before dying. Or it's a clerical error, upon investigation.
Can you give me evidence that Snopes is biased? It can't possibly be as biased as Investor's Business Daily editorial lmao