The Record (Troy, NY)

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- As I See It Email Cynthia Tucker at cynthia@cynthiatuc­ker.com.

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Among true believers on the right, there is no sturdier fiction -- no fairy tale more popular -than the one that insists American elections are plagued by voter fraud. “Election integrity” is the hallmark of GOP activists, and stories that purport to show voter fraud are a staple in the right-wing mediaspher­e.

Every nowand then, conservati­ve pundits come up with an actual case of ballot- box shenanigan­s. But as numerous studies have shown, the incidence of voter fraud is infinitesi­mal. The real problem in American elections is that so few citizens trouble themselves to cast a ballot.

Still, themyth has been circulatin­g for decades now, having gained popularity around the same time that the Voting Rights Act guaranteed black citizens access to the ballot. ( Wonder why?)- The truth is that the GOP has long practiced the political art of intimidati­ng voters of color at the ballot box, using tactics both subtle and not- so- subtle.

With Donald J. Trump as president, however, the GOP has abandoned any pretense of subtlety. Trump has plumped up the myth of voter fraud with outrageous accusation­s, incredible theories and charges that could not possibly be true. He claims that he lost the popular vote because of massive voter fraud, an accusation that makes the wild conspiraci­es on ABC’s “Scandal” seem like reports from “60 Minutes.”

Then there’s his Election Integrity Commission, a panel whose title turns the truth on its head. Charged with ferreting out the massive voter fraud that Trump invented, the panel is stacked with hacks who have spent decades trying to suppress the votes of people of color. The voter fraud commission is itself a fraud.

Just listen to panel vice chairman Kris Kobach, Kansas Secretary of State and an expert in the art of voter suppressio­n. Days before the panel was to meet in New Hampshire, Kobach proclaimed that widespread voter fraud had changed election results there, handing the state over to Democrats. His evidence? He had none. New Hampshire allows students ( and others) to vote with out- of- state driver’s licenses, and that led Kobach to declare they had voted illegally.

The panel also counts among its members the notorious Hans von Spakovsky, who made his bones as a voter- suppressio­n expert in Georgia. He was an early proponent of the purges of voter rolls that knocked hundreds of thousands of legitimate voters off the rosters. And as a high- ranking appointee in the Justice Department of George W. Bush, he made “voter integrity” the centerpiec­e of enforcemen­t efforts. In other words, he spent taxpayer dollars not on helping the historical­ly disenfranc­hised to vote, but on trying to block them from the polls.

Many civil rights activists and civil libertaria­ns are worried that Trump’s election commission will recommend yet more draconian regulation­s that will serve to keep less- affluent voters from the polls. I’m beginning to think those fears are overwrough­t; the commission isn’t credible enough to persuade most rational citizens that the election system is overwhelme­d by fraud.

That’s not to say that the voter suppressio­n crowd hasn’t already done significan­t harm. At the dawn of the 21st century, as demographi­cs were shifting political power to a coalition of voters of color who tend to favor Democrats, Republican­s hit on their most effective tactic yet: voter ID.

In 2013, the U. S. Supreme Court gave voter ID laws its imprimatur. The requiremen­t for a state- issued photo ID has the benefit of superficia­l appeal, though it’s actually a way to block the ballot for poorer voters who lack a driver’s license. And as Republican­s took power in state after state during the tenure of President Barack Obama, more and more GOP- dominated legislatur­es passed strict voter ID laws.

Law professor Richard L. Hasen, author of “The Voting Wars,” credits von Spakovsky with popularizi­ng the propaganda about voter fraud. “Thanks to von Spakovsky and the flame- fanning of a few others, the myth that Democratic voter fraud is common, and that it helps Democrats win elections, has become part of the Republican orthodoxy,” he told The New Yorker.

Still, Trump’s Election Integrity Commission is ridiculous, over- the- top and lacking in logic, discipline and simple facts. In other words, it is toomuch like Trump himself to be taken seriously.

 ??  ?? Cynthia Tucker
Cynthia Tucker

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