The Arizona Republic

Study: 1 in 8 U.S. voter registrati­ons has errors

- By Mike Baker

OLYMPIA, Wash. — About 24 million voter registrati­ons in the United States contain significan­t errors, including about 1.8 million dead people still on the rolls and many more approved to vote in multiple states, according to a report released Tuesday.

Even though the inaccuraci­es impact one in eight registrati­ons, researcher­s at the Pew Center on the States said they don’t see it as an indicator of widespread fraud. Rather, they believe outdated systems are failing to keep pace with the most basic changes in people’s lives, feeding perception­s that U.S. elections are not as airtight as they could be.

In conjunctio­n with Pew’s report, eight states said they are working this year on a centralize­d data system to help identify people whose registrati­ons may be out of date.

“A lot of people probably assume we do this already,” said Sam Reed, who oversees elections as Washington’s secretary of state. “I think it’s going to bring more trust and confidence in the election system.”

About 2.7 million people have active registrati­ons in multiple states, including about 2,000 people registered in four or more states, according to the Pew report. Elections officials said it is difficult to track when someone has moved to another state without canceling their previous registrati­on.

Some 1.8 million deceased people are still listed as active voters, according to the study, which is based on a computer analysis of a proprietar­y voter database used by Democrats. Researcher­s believe 12.7 million records do not reflect the current addresses of active voters while 12 million contain address inaccuraci­es, including those that make it unlikely that mail could reach them.

Some of the files contain multiple problems, with Pew estimating that a total of 24 million have problems.

The eight states involved in the centraliza­tion project are Colorado, Delaware, Maryland, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Virginia and Washington.

Pew believes the centralize­d system and online voter registrati­ons will help save money by eliminatin­g the need to print millions of forms, enter data by hand or send mail to outdated or incorrect addresses.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States