The Denver Post

Dems, GOP are wrong to escalate the voting war

- By Ross Douthat

About two years ago I did something foolish: I wrote an optimistic column arguing that a polarizing issue was ripe for deescalati­on and compromise.

The issue was voting rights, where Republican­s have long championed voter ID laws as a bulwark against alleged voting fraud, while Democrats have countered that such restrictio­ns unfairly burden many Americans, racial minorities especially, in the exercise of their hard-won right to vote.

The good news, I said back then, was that lots of studies suggest that voter ID laws don’t do either thing. They don’t prevent much (or any) fraud, but they also don’t have much (if any) effect on turnout, for minorities or any other group. So conservati­ves could stop pushing them, liberals could stop freaking out about them, and without either side losing anything substantia­l, compromise and conciliati­on could rule the day.

Naturally since then the voting wars have only burned hotter, thanks to the exigencies of the coronaviru­s era and the arson of Donald Trump. The virus prompted a vast expansion of mail-in voting in the name of public health, Trump blamed vote-by-mail fraud (among other conspiraci­es) for his defeat, and soon a large swathe of conservati­ves became convinced corrupt balloting had stolen the election.

Now Republican­s all over the country are advancing bills that answer the “theft” of 2020 with new ID requiremen­ts and new limits on absentee and early votes, while Democrats are advancing a national bill that would essentiall­y federalize election law and make certain Republican restrictio­ns impermissi­ble. And each side is talking like this is an existentia­l fight, with the very concept of a fair democratic election hanging in the balance.

But the facts continue to suggest otherwise, with two new studies adding to the case for compromise and calm.

The first study, from the Democracy and Polarizati­on Lab at Stanford University, looks at the effects of “no-excuse absentee voting” on the 2020 election — the kind of balloting that a lot of states expanded and that many Republican state legislator­s now want to roll back. However, easing the voting rules this way seemed to have no effect on turnout: “States newly implementi­ng no-excuse absentee voting for 2020 did not see larger increases in turnout than states that did not.”

Then contrary to Republican fears, the easement didn’t help Democrats at the GOP’s expense: “No-excuse absentee did not substantia­lly increase Democratic turnout relative to Republican turnout.” Overall the authors argue that what drove higher turnout in 2020 was simply “voter

interest” in the election, not the major voting rule change.

The second study comes from a doctoral candidate at the University of Oregon, and it looks further back in time to assess the effects of Shelby County v. Holder, the Supreme Court revision of the Voting Rights Act that made it easier for states to impose voter ID laws and other restrictio­ns. Using data from six federal elections, the author finds no postShelby divergence between white and African American turnout in states affected by the ruling. Indeed, if anything, the jurisdicti­ons saw African American turnout rise relative to white turnout in the 2016 election, suggesting that new obstacles to voting prompt swift mobilizati­on in response.

So rule changes favored by Democrats that make it modestly easier to vote probably didn’t help Democrats win the 2020 elections, and rule changes favored by Republican­s that make it modestly harder to vote probably haven’t suppressed minority votes. Great news! I’m sure that now we can call off the voting war and just find a sensible compromise.

For instance, my own preferred grand bargain would limit absentee voting but increase funding for polling places and make Election Day a national holiday. This would address reasonable Republican concerns about the civic benefits of having most people vote together, on the same day with the same informatio­n, while also answering Democratic concerns about long lines and working-class access to the polls. But there are other possible compromise­s as well …

No, ha-ha, just kidding, we aren’t going to compromise, not when there’s an apocalypse to fundraise off. And to be clear, Republican­s are much more at fault for the needless escalation here. Democrats are guilty of rhetorical exaggerati­on and policy excess (their big voting rights bill, for instance, includes various traducemen­ts of free speech), but Republican­s instigated the policy battle and thanks to Trump they’ve gone deepest into paranoia. At their most sincere, they can seem clueless about how the history of Jim Crow shadows these debates; at their most cynical or Trumpy, they’re just indulging a racialized fear of mobs in cities stealing elections from decent white suburbanit­es. And the deeper they dig in against reasonable critiques, the more the primal conservati­ve suspicion of mass democracy, a “lower turnout is good, actually” mentality, has a way of coming out.

Some suspicion of pure democracy is essential to conservati­sm. But a high-minded case for lower turnout assumes that a smaller electorate will be more politicall­y engaged and therefore more civic-minded. The evidence of recent American history, though, is that highly engaged, high-informatio­n voters tend to be zealous and blinkered hyperparti­sans, in desperate need of balancing by more chilled-out and conflicted low-informatio­n votes.

The cynical conservati­ve case for lower turnout, meanwhile, assumes that conservati­sm is the natural party of the responsibl­e, always-registered-to-vote uppermiddl­e class. But as the GOP’s base has become more populist and working-class, and more anti-establishm­ent, this self-interested logic is crumbling.

This is part of why the conservati­ve fixation on hypothetic­al voter fraud is so exasperati­ng. If the Trump era proved anything, it’s that Republican­s can hold their ground as turnout rises. But instead of taking that as an opportunit­y to actually reach for majorities again, under the influence of #StoptheSte­al the party is effectivel­y telling potential supporters that it doesn’t want high turnout.

Then on the Democratic side, the focus on voting rules feeds a persistent misapprehe­nsion about the true constraint­s on liberal power. Liberals are disadvanta­ged in the American system at the moment, but it is longstandi­ng constituti­onal structures, the Electoral College and the Senate above all, that give Republican­s a modest advantage, not recent innovation­s in vote suppressio­n. There isn’t a vast nonvoting majority that would sweep the left into power if only it were easier to vote.

The Democratic Party of 2021 has power that’s only marginally out of proportion to its popular support: Democrats won the national House vote by roughly 51% to 48% and the presidenti­al popular vote by roughly 51% to 47%, and the fulcrum of power in Joe Biden’s Washington, a 51-50 Senate, is awfully close to those popular-vote splits.

This suggests that like the Republican minority, the Democratic majority runs a risk of letting a fixation on the structures of democracy become an excuse to shirk the more important work of a political party — which is to persuade the largest possible majority, not just a bare 51%, to vote its way. And the intensity of the debates over rules and structures, IDs and absentee ballots, reflects a bipartisan dynamic where neither coalition seems able to imagine being other than what it’s become in the last 10 years — a blocking minority for Republican­s, a super-slim majority for Democrats.

Again, I don’t expect a compromise to emerge out of this stalemate. Instead, I expect the election rules of the future to be written by the party that recognizes that the surest way to make certain your opponents can’t win unfairly is to make sure the election isn’t close.

 ??  ?? Ross Douthat has been an opinion columnist for The New York Times since 2009. He is the author of several books, most recently, “To Change the Church: Pope Francis and the Future of Catholicis­m.
Ross Douthat has been an opinion columnist for The New York Times since 2009. He is the author of several books, most recently, “To Change the Church: Pope Francis and the Future of Catholicis­m.

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