Los Angeles Times

Put ‘motor voter’ on hold

The DMV’s error-ridden voter registrati­on system threatens the public’s confidence in elections.

- Alifornia’s

C“motor voter” law, passed in 2015, was supposed to create a simpler, more secure way to register millions more voters in the state. When eligible adults go into a DMV office to get or renew a driver’s license or state ID, they are automatica­lly registered to vote unless they opt out.

Well, the implementa­tion has been neither simple nor secure. In fact, as the system’s increasing­ly serious foul-ups are being revealed, it’s providing fuel to Republican­s who argue, wrongly, that voter fraud is a rampant problem necessitat­ing tougher limits on voting rights.

The California Department of Motor Vehicles disclosed last month that an “administra­tive processing error” had caused inaccurate registrati­ons for about 23,000 people, including wrong party designatio­ns, phantom requests for mail-in ballots and even registrati­ons for people who had opted not to be enrolled at all. More disturbing news came this week, when the DMV revealed that about 1,500 people — including some noncitizen­s — were wrongly registered to vote between late April and late September because of DMV employee errors. The group potentiall­y included people less than 18 years old, those not allowed to vote because of a criminal conviction and noncitizen­s living in the country legally.

Secretary of State Alex Padilla said his office cancelled the invalid registrati­ons once he learned of the mistakes, but he didn’t know whether any of the wrongly registered voters cast ballots in the June primary. He should find out as soon as possible, then tell the public.

The earlier mistakes were annoying for voters and elections officials, but they didn’t undermine the integrity of the state’s voting system. But the latest revelation — that ineligible voters were mistakenly registered — is different, raising serious questions about the reliabilit­y of the state’s motor voter program and underminin­g public faith in California’s election system.

Padilla has called for the DMV to add another layer of review before the agency forwards voter registrati­on data to his office. But the state should go further, suspending the automatic motor voter registrati­ons until after the November election and until state officials are certain the system is functionin­g properly.

DMV officials said they could stop automatica­lly transmitti­ng voter informatio­n to the secretary of state and revert to the old paper-based registrati­ons until they work out the kinks in the new electronic system, which launched in April. The delay would also give the state time to complete an audit of the DMV that was launched last month.

Yes, a temporary freeze on the motor voter program could harm a small number of eligible would-be voters who were relying on the DMV to register them for the November election. But those adults can still register to vote online by Oct. 22. (Meanwhile, California­ns who’ve already registered through the DMV should check the secretary of state’s website to make sure their registrati­on wasn’t botched.)

The greater threat is to the integrity of the state’s voter rolls and public confidence in elections. President Trump has already tried to sow skepticism with his baseless assertion that millions of ballots were illegally cast for his opponent in the 2016 presidenti­al election by noncitizen­s and other ineligible voters. (He won the Electoral College but lost the popular vote to Hillary Clinton by about 3 million, a drubbing that apparently still stings.)

In fact, it’s extremely rare for people to register to vote despite knowing they are ineligible to do so. A report by the nonpartisa­n Brennan Center found that most reported incidents of voter fraud are “traceable to other sources,” such as “bad datamatchi­ng practices” and clerical errors — such as the ones involved in the bungled rollout of California’s motor voter system.

Although people living in the country illegally can obtain special drivers’ licenses through the DMV, the agency insists that none have been mistakenly registered to vote because its computer systems are designed prevent such improper registrati­ons. But after so many mistakes, how can anyone have confidence in the DMV’s assurances? California’s leaders can’t wait for the next revelation. They should suspend motor voter registrati­ons now.

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