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Voter Registration Drive Fuels Voter Suppression Attempts in Wisconsin

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Cross-posted at Project Vote's blog Voting Matters

By Nathan Henderson-James

Just yesterday we noted the right way to report on charges of voter fraud and the wrong way to go about it. We explained how the news media had been gamed by people with a partisan interest in the outcome of elections to gin up hysteria to engage in voter intimidation and voter disenfranchisement efforts.

Well, the partisans are back at it in Wisconsin, but this time the press is following the lead of Virginia journalists and scrutinizing the claims rather than simply reprinting the press release.

Here’s the backstory. The community organization ACORN has recently completed a voter registration drive in Milwaukee aimed at historically disenfranchised populations like low-income folks and African-Americans. The drive assisted voters complete some 35,000 cards. So far so good.

However,
some of ACORN’s canvassers were caught forging cards in order to get
paid for not doing the work. Under Wisconsin law all cards filled out,
completely or incompletely, fraudulently or not, are required to be
turned in. Out of the 35,000 cards, ACORN and Board of Elections
officials estimate that about 1500-2000 of them had problems. The bulk
of those were simple incompletes, but about 200 or so were clearly
attempts by canvassers to defraud both ACORN and the state of Wisconsin
by submitting false cards.

The traditional media has actually done a fairly good job reporting the story, going into great detail on how the cards were caught, the quality control procedures used by ACORN, and the context of the numbers involved versus the total number of cards submitted. This reportage has been ably supplemented by bloggers like Cory Liebmann at One Wisconsin Now and Capper at Cognitive Dissonance.

But, of course, this situation has served as an opportunity for conservative partisans to immediately pick up their calls for voter disenfranchisement policies such as voter ID. Such a policy would ironically, or perhaps not so ironically, actually push down the voter participation rates among those folks who most rely on voter registration drives to bring them into the civic participation process.

Here’s choice quote from Pete DiGaudio who writes as The Texas Hold ‘Em Blogger,

"Well, yes, I actually do support voter suppression. I am in favor of suppressing the vote of dead people, nonexistent people, convicted felons, illegal aliens, people voting more than once, et al. Every time one of these people votes, it cancels out my legitimate vote.

A simple thing like photo ID for voting would eliminate these fraudulent voters when they showed up at the polls."

Project Vote’s report The Politics of Voter Fraud (PDF) has consistently pointed out that there simply isn’t widespread voter fraud in the United States and any fraudulent voting has never been tied to voter registration fraud, which is what has partisans so breathless and hyperbolic.

But the rush to point to a solution like voter ID seems not to be bothered by facts. Like the fact that the so-called fraud every partisan points to is always centered on voter registration cards. Well, voter ID isn’t going to stop canvassers from wanting to get paid for not doing the work and it isn’t going to stop states like Wisconsin from requiring that every card be turned in regardless of its accuracy, completeness, or legitimacy and it’s definitely not going to help elections officials catch bad cards.

The truth is that the laws as written and enforced catch such problems. The mere fact of this story in the media means the system in Milwaukee works the way it is supposed to, catching problem cards. Voter ID, on the other hand stops something called "voter impersonation", which just doesn’t happen in the Untied States. Of the 24 convictions won by the US Department of Justice between 2002 and 2005 for voter fraud, most of them were for problems with submitting false or illegal absentee ballots. Voter ID laws do nothing to fix this problem. But what they are great at is stopping otherwise eligible voters from casting ballots.

And that’s how it works – raise loud cries of outrage over an illegal act that was caught using the safeguards that were put in place for just that situation, raise questions about the integrity of the entire elections system, and offer a solution that would not stop the identified problem and would, in fact, stop significant numbers of specific groups, generally groups who are already the most disenfranchised, from participating in elections.


Comments (6)

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Every time one of these people votes, it cancels out my legitimate vote.

How does he know that it doesn't add to his vote?

Great post! Highly rec'd. Great to see the press staying neutral.

can you post this at Daily Kos?

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crfo7,

All of our diaries are cross-posted to our Daily Kos page as well.

http://project-vote.dailykos.com/

I don't dispute anything about how fake the concerns about voter fraud are. Nonetheless, ACORN and other groups that pay canvassers fro registrations invite fraud. Since the requirement to turn in all cards means they can't filter the fraudulent ones themselves, they are asking for bad publicity. In fact, I'll go so far as to say the fraud committed by canvassers, even though their employers are the victim, is the single biggest support the photo Id proponents have. I was surprised in fact to find they still do this after all the bad publicity from prior elections. It makes me question the soundness of their judgment.

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ericf,

Given that there are 60 million eligible unregistered voters and that they are from disproportionally underrepresented communities, like communities of color, low-income communities, and young people, and that nearly 15% of African-American registered to vote through voter registration drives and that even the most dedicated volunteers can gather maybe 20 cards a day, how would you suggest running a voter registration drive to reach over a million people in time for them to vote in November 2008?

The simple reality is that you can't do it without hiring people and if you are trying to reach disenfranchised communities you need to hire from those communities in order to ensure maximum penetration. Volunteering isn't an option.

And let's be clear. The "fraud" we're talking about involves well under 2% of the total cards gathered AND it was all caught before it had a chance to make it into the registrar's hand. The system worked the way it was supposed to.

Further, the tricks used to push voter ID and other voter suppression activities are not limited to crying "fraud" when bad VR cards are discovered. As this blog posting tries to make clear, if the press is doing its job, teh efficacy of crying fraud goes down because those claims are contextualized and debunked. This is just one battle in a war as old as the country to try to ensure that only the "right" kind of people voter instead of all elgible voters. Before they used poll taxes and literacy tests (and before that lynchings and mayhem), now they use voter ID, proof of citizenship, onerous regulations on VR drives, etc.

We think that the benefit of having registered 2.75 million of the hardest to reach voters between 2004 and 2008, which leads to the permanent expansion of the electorate outweighs the threat that conservatives will try to pass legislation that negated these achievements. Since we know that this is going to happen anyway, we need to get out and register voters.

Over the past three election cycles the quality control measures in place in these drives have become very very good. Every card is checked for accuracy, every voter gets three phone calls to verify the info on the card. That's how these folks were caught. The laws says turn the cards in so we did. progressisve should not let difficult laws get in the way of making democracy work for everyone.

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