The Capital

Election integrity of concern to both sides

- By Fred Lucas Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Los Angeles County, a bastion of leftwing politics, removed 1.2 million ineligible voters from its voter rolls in February — a move the Democrats frequently call “purging” when officials in red states do it.

It’s hardly a purge when voters were inactive and included names of those who had either died or moved out of the county. Something California has become known for in recent years is an exodus of residents.

Los Angeles County didn’t follow federal law voluntaril­y, however. It did so after reaching a 2019 settlement in a lawsuit led by Judicial Watch, a government watchdog that teamed with California clients.

This action comes after New York City settled a similar case with Judicial Watch in December to remove 441,083 ineligible names from the voter rolls.

Voter fraud is a real concern in this country.

Los Angeles County, which encompasse­s Compton, is familiar with the problem, after a 2021 Compton City Council election was overturned because of voter fraud.

Also recently, six Minnesota counties removed a total of 501 duplicate names of voters after separate settlement­s with the Public Interest Legal Foundation, another watchdog group, which sued in September.

It’s not just blue states. The Judicial Watch reached a February 2022 settlement with North Carolina in which two counties removed more than 430,000 inactive voters. North Carolina is where one of the largest voter fraud scandals occurred in recent years, as a 2018 U.S. House race was overturned because of a ballot-harvesting scam. The fraudsters in this election were on the Republican side — all the more reason that election integrity should be bipartisan.

What some left-wing propagandi­sts denounce as “purging” voter rolls is, in reality, complying with federal law.

The 1993 National Voter Registrati­on Act, better known as the Motor Voter Law, allows Department of Motor Vehicle offices to register people to vote. But the law also requires states to “conduct a general program that makes a reasonable effort to remove” from the official voter rolls “the names of ineligible voters” who have died or changed residence.

The Motor Voter Law, among other things, requires those registrati­ons to be canceled when voters fail to respond to address confirmati­on notices and then fail to vote in general elections for federal offices.

Further, the 2002 Help America Vote Act calls for states to create a voter registrati­on database to facilitate data-sharing and list maintenanc­e across state lines. HAVA further requires states to report data concerning their removal programs to the Election Assistance Commission.

The voter-suppressio­n hysteria industry, which includes the Stacey Abramsfoun­ded Fair Fight Action and the Brennan Center for Justice, claims that “purging” will accidental­ly remove eligible voters.

That same 2002 HAVA law allows a voter to cast a provisiona­l ballot if there is a question about his or her eligibilit­y. So there is practicall­y zero chance someone would be turned away or his or her vote not be counted. Any election official that turns away a voter without even offering the chance to cast a provisiona­l ballot would be violating federal law.

As I note in my book “The Myth of

Voter Suppressio­n,” the state of Pennsylvan­ia reached a settlement agreement in a federal lawsuit with the Public Interest Legal Foundation in 2021 to remove 21,000 dead people’s names from its voter registrati­on lists. The legal foundation also discovered 25,975 dead people remained on the Michigan voter rolls.

Yet clean voter rolls, similar to other commonsens­e measures such as voter ID, have become strangely partisan.

This is a relatively recent phenomenon, however. The 2005 report from the bipartisan Carter-Baker Commission, named for co-chairs former Democrat President Jimmy Carter and Republican Secretary of State James Baker, states, “Invalid voter files, which contain ineligible, duplicate, fictional, or deceased voters, are an invitation to fraud.”

The Carter-Baker Commission came at a time when election integrity was a bipartisan issue and both sides supported making it easy to vote and hard to cheat. The sooner we regain this mentality, the safer — and fairer — our elections will be.

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