Pax On Both Houses: Compendium Of Voter Fraud And Voter Suppression Posts
9 Facts That Blow Up the Voter Fraud Myth
Stealing votes is hard. So is casting ballots for millions of Americans.
| Fri Mar. 25, 2016
Among the conservative talking points that refuse to die is the idea that there is widespread voter fraud in America. The most recent warning about the scourge of illegal voting came from Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who recently claimed "the fact is voter fraud is rampant."
That's simply not true, as many new outlets reported. (See here, here, and here).According to Politifact, there were just 85 prosecutions for voter fraud in Texas from 2002 to 2015, and not all of them led to convictions. That's a paltry number considering that more than 42 million ballots were cast in the state's general elections from 2002 to 2014.
The reality is that voter fraud—which includes a range of offenses from impersonating another voter to casting more than one vote—is extraordinarily rare. And the tsunami of voter ID laws, address requirements, and sloppy purges of voter rolls has made it much harder for Americans—particularly minorities and poor voters—to cast their ballots.
Here are some selections from our reporting on the voter fraud myth and the impact of anti-voter-fraud laws:
- The rate of fraud in US elections is close to zero.
- UFO sightings are more common than voter fraud.
- So is getting struck by lightning.
- Florida’s aggressive efforts to root out voter fraud before the 2000 election erroneously purged 12,000 names from the voter rolls—of the 12,000, 44 percent, more than 4,700 voters—were African American. That was more than enough votes to change the outcome of that year's presidential election.
- Native Americans are fighting a slew of high-stakes legal battles over voting rights; many of the lawsuits are linked to rules that were designed to prevent voting fraud.
- Voter ID laws are among a host of hurdles that minorities face when they cast a ballot.
- A national voter ID card could end the debate on voter fraud, but both parties hate that idea.
- GOP presidential contender Ted Cruz's Iowa chairman spent $250,000 to stop people from voting.
- Interestingly, a conservative activist inadvertently demonstrated how hard it is to commit voter fraud.
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