The Guardian (USA)

Republican National Committee sues Michigan over state’s voter rolls

- Alice Herman and Sam Levine

The Republican National Committee (RNC) has sued Michigan’s secretary of state, Jocelyn Benson, in federal court, using a flawed analysis of population data to argue that the state’s voter rolls are bloated and inaccurate.

The filing claims that in 76 of the state’s 83 counties, registered voters exceeded the number of citizens eligible to vote there or have “rates of active voter registrati­on” that are “suspicious­ly high”. The claim closely matches a similar one that has been circulatin­g since Donald Trump lost the 2020 election to Joe Biden – that a high level of voter registrati­on is a smoking gun for fraud.

It’s not that straightfo­rward.

Federal law, which requires that states regularly conduct voter list maintenanc­e, also requires states to wait multiple election cycles before removing inactive voters from the rolls. The safeguard – to prevent people from being disenfranc­hised for not voting – means that voter rolls necessaril­y contain some amount of outdated voter registrati­on informatio­n.

The suit claims that there are many counties in Michigan where the number of registered voters is suspicious­ly high, and in some cases greater than the eligible voting age population. That claim is based on a comparison of 2022 population data from the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (ACS) and “the most up to date count of registered active voters available from the Michigan Bureau of Elections”.

The suit does not say the date from which it is measuring voter registrati­on, but the bureau appears to update voter registrati­on statistics daily.

Experts have long warned the methodolog­y the RNC relies on in the suit paints a misleading picture of the voter rolls. Comparing more recent voter registrati­on informatio­n to outdated ACS population numbers can give an exaggerate­d impression of voter roll bloat.

“They use an inflated voter registrati­on number and a deflated votereligi­ble population number, leading to a misleading result,” a federal judge wrote in 2018, ruling against challenger­s in a similar lawsuit. “By relying upon an inaccurate registrati­on rate as a basis to suggest a lack of list maintenanc­e, the entire premise of this opinion is flawed from the start.”

Moreover, the ACS seeks to capture general population numbers, but someone, like a college student or a person in the military, can be registered to vote in a place where they are not living.

“Registrati­on is about domicile, Census estimates of [citizen voting age population] CVAP are about where you lay your head. You can still be legally registered in a jurisdicti­on even if you’re not physically present there,” Justin Levitt, a professor at Loyola law school in Los Angeles, wrote in a 2020 blogpost.

“Any jurisdicti­on that sends a lot of people to the military, but doesn’t have a base, may well have more lawfully registered people than Census CVAP estimates show.”

The Wednesday filing comes just days after a Michigan judge dismissed a case brought by the rightwing Public Interest Legal Foundation (Pilf), which claimed Benson’s office had failed to properly remove deceased voters from the rolls. In fact, the judge found, Michigan is “consistent­ly among the most active states in the United States in cancelling the registrati­ons of deceased individual­s” and “deceased voters are removed from Michigan’s voter rolls on a regular and ongoing basis”.

It also comes in the immediate wake of Trump’s overhaul of the RNC, which saw scores of administra­tive staff and the committee’s top leadership replaced with Trump loyalists. Among the new hires are a team of lawyers RNC leadership say will focus on elections litigation – including Christina Bobb, an attorney who played a key role in promoting Trump’s false claim that the 2020 election was stolen.

Since 2020, rightwing groups have consistent­ly thrown into question the validity of voter rolls, especially in swing states. One of the most popular methods that states use to clean their voter rolls, the Electronic Registrati­on Informatio­n Center (Eric), has become the focal point of rightwing conspiracy theories relating to elections administra­tion – prompting nine states to leave the program.

Conservati­ve groups have increasing­ly targeted voter rolls, including in Michigan, where the state is working to reinstate hundreds of voters whose registrati­ons were challenged by rightwing activists and subsequent­ly removed from the rolls by local clerks. This campaign has been promoted by top Trump allies and embraced by grassroots groups and individual­s who believe Trump’s false claims of widespread voter fraud.

Benson has denounced the RNC lawsuit.

“Let’s call this what it is: a PR campaign masqueradi­ng as a meritless lawsuit filled with baseless accusation­s that seek to diminish people’s faith in the security of our elections,” Benson wrote in a statement.

“Shame on anyone who abuses the legal process to sow seeds of doubt in our democracy.”

 ?? Jocelyn Benson, the Michigan secretary of state. Photograph: Emily Elconin/Reuters ??
Jocelyn Benson, the Michigan secretary of state. Photograph: Emily Elconin/Reuters

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