Texarkana Gazette

Voter fraud claims are nothing new to Republican­s

- Carl Leubsdorf

The Republicat­ion preoccupat­ion with voter fraud didn’t start with Donald Trump.

It’s been a GOP concern for decades and led to a major scandal in the previous Republican administra­tion that forced the resignatio­n of the attorney general and several other top officials.

Allegation­s of voter fraud have also preoccupie­d GOP officials in several states, including Texas under Attorneys General Greg Abbott, now governor, and Ken Paxton.

Neither found anything beyond scattered cases of individual­s seeking to vote illegally. But that hasn’t stopped their contention­s that it is a major problem.

At least two past national GOP efforts against alleged voter fraud ended badly.

In the 1980s, the Republican National Committee created a National Ballot Security Task Force to prevent voter fraud during a New Jersey governor’s race. It sent armed, off-duty police officers to voting sites, especially in minority areas, prompting a suit by the Democratic National Committee alleging voter intimidati­on.

The RNC agreed to a federal court consent decree requiring it to stop such tactics. The agreement expired in 2017, making the 2020 election the first in decades that any aggressive monitoring of polling places was freed from federal court scrutiny.

The scandal occurred two decades later, after former President George W. Bush and White House aides pressured their Justice Department to prosecute more voter fraud.

The administra­tion’s concerns about voter fraud started during the disputed 2000 presidenti­al election in Florida, where Bush narrowly clinched the presidency. In 2002, his first attorney general, John Ashcroft, launched a Ballot Access and Voting Integrity Initiative, designed to train U.S. attorneys to investigat­e and prosecute voter fraud cases more vigorously.

Four years later, the department reported that, because of the initiative, “nationwide enforcemen­t of election crimes has increased dramatical­ly.” But its own numbers belied that conclusion – only 119 people had been charged and 86 convicted over four years.

After Bush’s 2004 re-election, Republican­s in some states accused the administra­tion of failing to investigat­e Democratic voter irregulari­ties. The issue came to a head in the fall of 2006.

In a conversati­on that October with Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, White House spokeswoma­n Dana Perino later disclosed, Bush believes “he may have mentioned” he had received complaints about some U.S. attorneys not energetica­lly pursuing voter fraud investigat­ions.

But she said White House officials including Bush “did not direct DOJ to take any specific action.” Gonzales said he didn’t recall the conversati­on.

After weeks of consultati­ons between the Justice Department and the White House, the administra­tion fired seven U.S. attorneys. Five others were either fired later or considered for dismissal.

The Washington Post said the top White House political operative, deputy chief of staff Karl Rove, criticized some attorneys for failing to act more aggressive­ly against voter fraud, including failure to prosecute local Democrats.

U.S. attorneys can be fired at any time. But the firings raised the question of White House interferen­ce in the Justice Department, the same issue involved in Trump’s efforts to pressure the department to help overturn his defeat.

The resulting uproar led to the forced resignatio­n of

Gonzales and other top officials, plus several investigat­ions.

In Texas, both Abbott and Paxton alleged voter fraud was a major problem. “Voter fraud is rampant,” Abbott said in 2016.

However, a study by News21, an investigat­ive journalism project at Arizona State University, examined Texas records from 2001-11 and found only 104 cases of voter fraud among 35.8 million votes cast in general elections.

The web site of the Heritage Foundation, a conservati­ve think tank, currently lists just 103 cases in which Texas individual­s have been convicted or otherwise sanctioned for election fraud since 2005. votes in 2016.

In 2020, as in 2016, Trump started alleging voter fraud weeks before the election, contending it was the only way he could lose to Joe Biden. He expanded his complaints after he did lose to Biden.

As recent congressio­nal hearings documented, Trump spent two months unsuccessf­ully trying to convince state authoritie­s, federal courts and his own Justice Department of sufficient fraud to overturn Biden’s victory.

It’s no wonder so many Republican­s have bought Trump’s siren song. After all, they’ve been hearing it for years.

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