Chattanooga Times Free Press

MASS PURGES ARE THE NEW VOTER SUPPRESSIO­N

- Michael Waldman is president of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law.

The United States still has one of the world’s most decentrali­zed voter registrati­on systems. We want voter rolls to be up to date and accurate. People move, die, change party identifica­tion and so on. But election deniers exploit cracks in the county-by-county system. They challenge legitimate registrati­ons, launch mass purges and seek to weed the voter rolls of citizens they don’t like.

In fact, there’s new evidence that abusive mass voter purges will be a major weapon in the political battles of the coming months. If you can’t win citizens to your side, it appears, then try to prevent them from voting.

The New York Times recently detailed an organized effort involving leaders of the election denial movement. One is Cleta Mitchell, who joined Donald Trump on the notorious phone call with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger that is now the subject of two separate indictment­s. Another is a top deputy to pillow mag nate-turned-election-cons piracy theorist Mike Lin dell. Their acolytes are launching mass challenges of voter registrati­ons, sometimes 1,000 at a time. They say it’s a citizen-led effort to update the rolls and reduce the potential for voter fraud. Don’t believe it for a second.

For one thing, their efforts appear to be focused on precincts that lean Democratic or are home to large communitie­s of color. This seems to be about politics, not voter-roll hygiene.

Another clue: Their methods are bogus. In one incident, activists sent a local election office a list of people on the U.S. Postal Service’s mailforwar­ding list who remained registered to vote in the district. Election officials know this is a shoddy approach to roll maintenanc­e. People can ask for their mail to be forwarded for any number of reasons, including college, temporary work assignment­s, or caring for sick or elderly relatives elsewhere. In all of these scenarios, the person remains eligible to vote.

A challenge alone should not, in theory, prevent someone from voting. But it can kick off an investigat­ion that results in removal from the rolls if the citizen fails to respond to inquiries — in other words, if they miss a piece of mail.

These mass challenges also can resemble a distribute­d denial of service attack, with emails flooding a website, aiming to just gum up the works. Election officials who are responding to excessive numbers of abusive demands for action won’t have time to process new registrati­ons.

There has been, of course, a tested way to keep the rolls updated: the Electronic Registrati­on Informatio­n Center, or ERIC. States use this nonpartisa­n informatio­n-sharing organizati­on to reduce error in maintainin­g their rolls. For example, rather than relying on mail-forwarding requests, ERIC looks for informatio­n like an applicatio­n for a driver’s license in a different state. It also has access to sensitive informatio­n such as encrypted Social Security numbers, reducing the number of false positives. People who move rarely vanish.

ERIC is undoubtedl­y the best way to avoid voter fraud and keep lists accurate and complete. Bizarrely, a rightwing conspiracy theory claims that it was all a nefarious plot. Nine GOP-dominated states have withdrawn from the system.

Let’s try to recover bipartisan agreement on how to keep voter rolls in shape. Meanwhile, we should brace for a year of efforts by election deniers to wreck what works in our system. Voting rights advocates in and out of government are getting ready to fight back in court. The ability of many of our fellow citizens to participat­e in this pivotal election will depend on the outcome of this fight.

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Michael Waldman

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