The Columbus Dispatch

Facts don’t slow rush to cry fraud

- — The Baltimore Sun

Americans should thank Kris Kobach for his timely demonstrat­ion that President Donald Trump’s “election integrity” commission is the scam its critics have been claiming all along. Kobach, who serves as co-chair of the commission as well as Kansas secretary of state and who is an aspiring candidate for governor, wrote a column in Breitbart News that he had “proof” of so much voter fraud in New Hampshire that it turned the outcome of the U.S. Senate race.

The claim was so swiftly and easily dispatched at a fact- finding hearing in Manchester on Tuesday that it dramatical­ly illustrate­d the foundation of the entire enterprise — a search to justify voter- suppressio­n laws on any and all grounds possible, no matter the lack of evidence of actual voter fraud.

What did Kobach claim? He wrote that because thousands of people who registered to vote on Election Day used outofstate driver’s licenses ( which he concedes is legal under New Hampshire law if they indicate New Hampshire is their “domicile”) with most subsequent­ly failing to acquire a New Hampshire driver’s license or register a vehicle in the state, it was enough to swing the election for Democrat Maggie Hassan over Republican Sen. Kelly Ayotte. After all, he reasoned, New Hampshire is surrounded by states that lean Democratic, so these alleged fraudulent voters likely backed Hassan.

The biggest problem with that argument is that it ignored a significan­t voting bloc: college students. Under New Hampshire law, it’s perfectly acceptable for someone attending school in New Hampshire to vote in elections because they live there most of the year. Nor is it required that they transfer their driver’s license to New Hampshire nor register their car there.

Even Republican leaders in New Hampshire aren’t buying into the idea that there were thousands of fraudulent votes cast last November. They concede that not only are college students a possibilit­y, but there are likely some people who failed to change their driver’s licenses or re- register their cars. On Tuesday, Kobach acknowledg­ed the issue was “complicate­d” and said more research needed to be done.

Over and over again, Kobach and others who claim rampant voter fraud in U. S. elections ignore facts, make sweeping generaliza­tions and come to conclusion­s that simply aren’t justified. The commission has operated in a secretive manner and sought informatio­n about voters from states that is clearly protected. The entire enterprise was built on a falsehood — Trump’s claim that millions of noncitizen­s voted in the election, a whopper so enormous and so often debunked that its continued circulatio­n, particular­ly among Trump supporters, raises serious doubts about whether mere fact- checking and truthtelli­ng can ever penetrate such a closely held, hyperparti­san belief.

That’s not to suggest there aren’t valid threats to election integrity. It’s just that most of it stems from matters of human error. There are dead people on registrati­on rolls. There are issues with the adequacy and lack of standardiz­ation of technology. But here’s the biggest problem of all: There are tens of millions of Americans who are qualified to vote but do not register.

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