Walker County Messenger

Voter fraud isn’t real — but voter suppressio­n is a grave danger

- By Liz Kennedy and Danielle Root

By every valid account, voter fraud is exceedingl­y rare. Yet this noxious myth continues to be perpetuate­d by self-serving politician­s seeking to deny American citizens their voices and their power at the polls. While voter fraud is virtually nonexisten­t, the real threat to our democracy is voter suppressio­n that keeps people from casting their ballots in the first place.

Politician­s who fan the flames of the voter fraud conspiracy rely on fearmonger­ing by telling Americans that their elections are being overrun by nonexisten­t fraudulent voters. By doing so, these very same politician­s can then pass suppressiv­e voting laws and affect election outcomes. In 2011, emails were uncovered between a Republican operative in Wisconsin and a colleague concerning the state’s tight Supreme Court race. In preparing for an unfavorabl­e outcome, the Republican operative wrote, “Do we need to start messaging ‘widespread reports of election fraud’ so we are positively set up for the recount regardless of the final number? … I obviously think we should.” In striking down Wisconsin’s strict photo ID law this summer, a federal court wrote that “preoccupat­ion with mostly phantom election fraud leads to real incidents of disenfranc­hisement.”

Up until 2013, the Voting Rights Act adequately protected Americans’ right to vote from the worst abuses, but the U.S. Supreme Court’s Shelby County v. Holder decision severely weakened those protection­s. In response, Republican leaders in states across the country raced to implement restrictiv­e voting measures that would keep their party in power by making it more difficult to vote. In total, 14 states had new voting restrictio­ns in place for the first time in a presidenti­al election, including strict voter ID laws and measures that slashed early voting opportunit­ies.

Many of these states cited voter fraud as the reason for passing suppressiv­e measures. In reality, courts have found that voter fraud is “a truly isolated phenomenon” in many of those places. Texas, for example, passed its strict voter ID law to police against voter fraud, but the federal 5th Circuit Court of Appeals found that there were “only two conviction­s for in-person voter impersonat­ion fraud out of 20 million votes cast in the decade” when striking down the law last July.

Those who champion voter suppressio­n laws are often the most vocal voter fraud conspiracy theorists. They know that voter ID laws and cuts made to polling places and early voting disproport­ionately affect people of color, people with low incomes, as well as students and youths—groups that tend to vote for Democrats. In striking down North Carolina’s monster voter suppressio­n bill, the federal 4th Circuit Court of Appeals found that the state legislator­s set out to “deliberate­ly ‘target African-Americans with almost surgical precision’” in an effort to suppress black voters.

The facts are clear that voter suppressio­n laws cost a significan­t number of Americans their voices at the polls this year. As an example, in Wisconsin, where voter turnout was at its lowest level in two decades, 300,000 registered voters lacked the strict forms of photo ID needed to vote. Places such as Milwaukee, where 70 percent of the state’s African American population lives, were hit the hardest, with voter turnout decreasing by 13 percent. In addition, cuts made to polling places and early voting in Ohio and North Carolina also disproport­ionately affected people of color and led to lower voter turnout.

Fearmonger­s have succeeded in convincing nearly half of all Americans that widespread voter fraud is real. In doing so, they have been able to pass laws that deprive eligible Americans of their right to vote. Voter fraud does not pose a threat to American democracy because it simply does not exist. Voter fraud conspiracy theories, on the other hand, have led to a direct assault on our democracy and our fundamenta­l constituti­onal rights through tactics to suppress American voters.

There is a real threat that voter suppressio­n laws will become more common and severe in coming years with Republican­s now taking control of the presidency, both chambers of the U.S. Congress, two-thirds of state legislativ­e chambers, and soon, perhaps, a conservati­ve majority on the U.S. Supreme Court. Americans must see through the conspiracy theories and push back against voter suppressio­n laws: They are based on a lie and are eroding our republic and the values for which it stands.

The Center for American Progress is a nonpartisa­n research and educationa­l institute dedicated to promoting a strong, just and free America that ensures opportunit­y for all. Liz Kennedy is the Director of Democracy and Government Reform at the Center for American Progress. Danielle Root is the Voting Rights Manager at the Center.

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