The Record (Troy, NY)

Who is ‘rigging’ the vote? Look at Republican­s

- Cynthia Tucker

As if he hadn’t already broken just about every rule of convention­al politics (and common decency), Donald Trump decided at the last debate to plow through a guardrail of American democracy that has stood since the Civil War. In the final face-to-face encounter with Hillary Clinton, he refused to pledge to accept the results of the election.

Though audience members gasped at that display of utter contempt for the U.S. Constituti­on, it shouldn’t have come as a surprise. Trump has claimed for some time that the election is “rigged” against him.

As his polls numbers keep sinking, his claims of fraud and illegitima­cy keep rising. At every rally, he warns his supporters that a vast conspiracy comprising Clinton allies, the news media and numerous unnamed coconspira­tors has been working assiduousl­y to keep him from his rightful place in the Oval Office.

Here’s the irony: There are, indeed, some shenanigan­s underminin­g the electoral process, some nefarious machinatio­ns meant to skew the vote. But this chicanery isn’t aimed at defeating Trump; rather, the strategy is being carried out by GOP politician­s and operatives who, for the most part, want to see him elected.

In other words, the only widespread “rigging” that has taken place over the last decade has been conducted by the Republican Party, which has made a concerted effort to suppress the vote among the poor, the young and the elderly — all constituen­cies that tend to support Democrats. Having given up on enlarging their tent to attract more voters, the GOP has settled on a strategy of blocking the franchise for those whom it cannot win over.

This is a decades-old effort that goes back at least as far as the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. But Republican­s took to it in earnest over the last decade, when it became clear that demographi­c changes would make it difficult for the GOP to continue as a major party — given its history of alienating black Americans and other ethnic minorities.

The strategy of institutin­g photo ID laws gained currency in the early 2000s, when GOP operatives in states such as South Dakota wielded it as a weapon to suppress the votes of native Americans. Republican­s were disappoint­ed in the re-election of Democrat Tim Johnson, who won his 2002 race for the U.S.

Senate with just 524 votes — and a huge turnout on reservatio­ns.

The lesson was this: shaving off just a few hundred votes could boost the prospects of GOP challenger­s.

Requiring photo IDs worked because it seemed legitimate: Republican proponents claimed that they were only trying to protect the integrity of the ballot, to ensure against voter fraud. Never mind that voter fraud is very rare; the sort of in-person fraud that photo IDs would prevent is virtually non-existent.

Still, the idea had a superficia­l appeal. Middle-class voters take drivers’ licenses for granted; they find it hard to imagine that a significan­t portion of the population — voters who are disproport­ionately black or brown — doesn’t own cars. They also find it hard to fathom the difficulty that the impoverish­ed have in trying to obtain a government­sponsored ID.

Even federal courts became convinced that voter ID laws were necessary to crack down on fraud. Though he has since expressed

regret for that decision, then-Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens wrote the majority ruling that endorsed Indiana’s strict voter ID law in 2005.

When Republican governors and legislator­s gained power in the 2010 elections, they took to voter ID laws with alacrity. According to New York University’s Brennan Center for Justice, in the last six years, nearly half the states passed laws making it more difficult to cast a ballot.

And GOP strategist­s were conscienti­ous about aiming those laws at the voters most likely to support Democrats. In Texas, for example, student IDs from universiti­es are not acceptable at the polls, but concealed gun permits are acceptable. (A federal court has ordered modificati­ons to Texas’ law.) Guess which group is more likely to vote for Republican­s?

So if Trump is looking for evidence of rigged elections, it’s easy enough to find. He’s just looking in the wrong direction.

Email Cynthia Tucker at cynthia@cynthiatuc­ker.com.

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