The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kemp, GOP show us exactly what voter fraud looks like

- Jay Bookman He writes for The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

Fifty-three-thousand Georgia voters have been placed on “pending” status because data on their voter-registrati­on forms do not match exactly with data in other government databases. However, Secretary of State Brian Kemp — now the GOP nominee for governor — is correct when he reassures those 53,000 Georgians that they can vote a standard ballot in this election.

But let’s be clear: If Kemp had his way, this story would have had a different outcome. Those 53,000 can vote this year only because of a federal lawsuit filed in 2016 that accused Kemp and the state of Georgia of trying to “unlawfully disenfranc­hise tens of thousands of Georgia voting-eligible citizens, the vast majority of whom are minorities.”

The legal and factual arguments in that 2016 case against Kemp’s policy were so strong, and its unfair impact on minority voters so clear, that he surrendere­d without much of a fight. Put it another way, he got caught and he knew it.

Kemp agreed to a temporary order suspending that policy for the 2016 election. After the election, he agreed to a permanent settlement for those caught up in his nonsensica­l policy. It is those court-enforced restrictio­ns, not Kemp’s good intentions, that today ensure those 53,000 can vote.

Under Kemp’s original policy, those 53,000 registrati­ons with some sort of minor discrepanc­y would have been canceled outright after 40 days, with those voters losing their right to participat­e. If the Social Security Administra­tion had you listed as Bae Ji-Hyun but your voter registrati­on was entered as Bae Ji Hyun, you could not vote. If someone in the county election office mistyped your address as 4114 Main St. instead of 4141 Main St., through no fault of your own you could not vote.

That policy never served a valid public-policy purpose. It was also useless against voter fraud, in large part because for all practical purposes voter fraud doesn’t exist. Nationwide, each year the number of valid voting fraud cases that emerge from all ballots can literally be counted on one hand.

In fact, for almost two decades, conservati­ves at the local, state and federal levels have committed considerab­le government resources to try to prove voter fraud is real, and every effort has failed.

The George W. Bush administra­tion made federal prosecutio­n of voter fraud cases a top priority, yet came up all but empty. The “Presidenti­al Advisory Commission on Election Integrity,” formed by President Trump in early 2017, was an even greater disaster. Led by Vice President Mike Pence and Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, that commission was supposed to provide the evidence needed to bolster Trump’s claims that as many as 5 million illegal immigrants had voted against him, thus explaining why he lost the popular vote. Instead, the commission collapsed under its own embarrassm­ent, with Trump forced to abolish it seven months after its creation in order to stop the humiliatin­g headlines.

So it’s ridiculous to keep claiming voter fraud occurs on a scale large enough to tilt elections, yet is somehow undetectab­le by law enforcemen­t. But people keep claiming it and believing it so they can keep trying to justify efforts to put more and more hurdles in the way of potential voters.

That is the true voter fraud.

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