Houston Chronicle Sunday

GOP tackling a problem that doesn’t really exist

Leonard Pitts Jr. says the Republican­s’ focus on voter fraud is to be expected as an electorate rises that’s increasing­ly diverse.

- Pitts is a columnist for the Miami Herald. Readers may contact him via email at lpitts@miamiheral­d.com.

A little context is critical here.

It would be too easy to dismiss Donald Trump’s Commission on Electoral Integrity as superfluou­s evidence of the intellectu­al erosion of the Republican Party. As a Twitter observer who styles himself LOLGOP quipped last week when the commission held its first meeting: “All the evidence in the world won’t get the GOP to accept climate change but no evidence is necessary to stop black people from voting.”

And yes, the hypocrisy is staggering. Scientific consensus, Miami Beach flooding, record heat and a chunk of ice the size of Delaware breaking off the Antarctic ice shelf are not enough to convince President Dumpster Fire and his party to get serious about climate change. Meantime, a few dubious anecdotes of voting irregulari­ties get us a presidenti­al commission furrowing its brows over a “problem” that does not exist.

But the truth is, hypocritic­al is the least bad thing this is. Which brings us back to context.

Consider, for instance, the rise over the last 10 years of photo ID laws, putatively designed to keep ineligible people from voting. Never mind that this happens only slightly more frequently than Darth Vader dances the Macarena. Never mind, too, the alarms raised by observers who point out that poor people are less likely to have — or be readily able to obtain — such IDs.

Further context is found in the Supreme Court’s 2013 eviscerati­on of the Voting Rights Act. The VRA, enacted to fight the systematic denial of the ballot to African-American voters, required states that had engaged in this practice to get federal permission before changing their election laws. The Republican appointees on the court united to strike this provision down.

Still more context: the ongoing resistance in Republican states like Florida, Kentucky and Iowa to allowing ex-felons to vote. Mind you, having once served time does not exempt you from a duty to pay taxes, but in many places, it does rob you of the right to have a say in how those taxes are spent.

It is no mystery who these and other restrictio­ns are designed to hurt. After all, the population­s most likely to be affected, including AfricanAme­ricans and the poor, are those most likely to vote for Democrats. But if deductive reasoning is not enough to sway you, there’s also the fact that a Republican is occasional­ly impolitic enough to admit the chicanery outright.

As in a party official from North Carolina who bragged in 2013 that the state’s photo ID law would keep “lazy blacks” and others from voting. “The law is going to kick the Democrats in the butt,” Don Yelton told “The Daily Show.”

In a sense, you can’t fault Republican­s for this. The GOP is built on appealing to the anger and resentment of older, straight, white, Christian voters. What do you expect the party to do when faced with a rising electorate of rainbow colors, ages, religious philosophi­es and sexual identities? Change? Broaden? Be serious.

It is only mildly hyperbolic to describe what is happening here as a soft coup — the theft of legitimate power by illegitima­te means. The GOP has inflicted calculated violence on a core American creed that says we all have a voice and all our voices deserve to be heard.

Apparently, that’s something Republican­s no longer believe. And this new panel cannot help but have a chilling effect on non-GOP voters — precisely what it is intended to do. Too bad the party is not serious about ferreting out threats to the integrity of our elections.

It would not have to look far.

NOTE: In a recent column, I misstated the year of Philando Castile’s death. He was killed in 2016.

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