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The Century Foundation's Working Group on State Implementation of Election
Reform just released a report called Balancing
Access and Integrity that makes a number of innovative recommendations
for the states to follow in order to comply effectively and fairly with the
Help American Vote Act of 2004 in upcoming federal elections. While states are
likely to be receptive to many of the suggestions the group makes, in one area
the working group is definitely swimming against the tide: the report flatly
states that there is no reason for states to go beyond HAVA's narrow provisions
regarding the presentation
of identification in order to vote.
Since the passage of that act many states have, in the name of fighting "fraud,"
plunged forward to enact stricter and stricter identification requirements for
voting. Some 20 states now require all voters to present identification in order
to cast a ballotsometimes even mandating that it be a government issued
photo identification. Yet the scholars of elections and election law involved
in this group unanimously state that there is simply very scant evidence that
such measures do anything to combat fraud. While the potential disenfranchising
impacts of such requirements also need further study, the report points out
that there is some anecdotal evidence that identification requirements serve
to disenfranchise major segments of the voting population.
Since the publication of the report, some real data has started to materialize
that supports these arguments.
For example, after practically every lawyer in the state scoured the land for
fraudulent votes in Washington State because of the election litigation surrounding
the gubernatorial race, only six
cases of alleged double voting were found.
Similarly, in Ohioperhaps the only other state to be subjected to the
same level of scrutiny as Washingtona
statewide survey found that of the 9,078,728 votes cast in Ohio's 2002 and
2004 general elections, a total of four were deemed as ineligible or "fraudulent"
and found by the board of elections and county prosecutors to be legally actionable.
As we further cite in the report, Georgia Secretary of State Kathy Cox wrote
in
a letter to Governor Sonny Purdue opposing the state's new identification
bill:
One of the primary justifications given by the Legislature for the passage
of the photo identification provisions of House Bill 244the elimination
of voter ID fraud at the pollsis an unfounded justification. I cannot recall
one documented case of voter fraud during my tenure as Secretary of State
or Assistant Secretary of State that specifically related to the impersonation
of a registered voter at voting polls. Our state currently has several practices
and procedures in existence to ensure that such cases of voter fraud would
have been detected if they in fact occurred, and at the very least, we would
have complaints of voters who were unable to vote because someone had previously
represented himself or herself as such person on that respective Election
Day.
The data is also mounting that identification requirements have disproportionately
disenfranchising impacts on certain communities. These include those less likely
to have the requisite identification and those with less ability to obtain itthe
poor, minorities, the elderly, the young, the elderly and urban residents. A
June 2005 study by the University of Wisconsin found the following:
- An estimated 23 percent of persons aged 65 and over do not have a Wisconsin
drivers license or a photo ID.
- An estimated 98,247 Wisconsin residents ages 35 through 64 also do not have
either a drivers license or a photo ID.
- Less than half (47 percent) of Milwaukee County African American adults
and 43 percent of Hispanic adults have a valid drivers license compared to
85 percent of white adults outside Milwaukee.
- For young adults ages 18-24 only 26 percent of African Americans and 34
percent of Hispanics in Milwaukee County have a valid license compared to
71 percent of young white adults in the balance of the state
Previous studies have produced results in accordance with these findings. A
study
by the The National Commission on Federal Election Reformthe Carter-Ford
Commissionfound in 2001 that 6 to 10 percent of the existing American
electorate lacks any form of state ID. A
1994 Justice Department study found that blacks in Louisiana were four to
five times less likely than whites to have photo IDs.
Given all this piling on of negative evidence, both in terms of the efficacy
of ID requirements in fulfilling the goal their advocate's claim and their impact
on voting rights, it is somewhat mind boggling that so many state officials,
as well as other groups working on this issue, are still vigorously pushing
for greater expansion of what seems to be a rather useless yet dangerous tool.
Shouldn't the burden of proof now shift to the advocates of more voter ID to
demonstrate the value of their cause?
Tova Andrea Wang is a senior program officer and Democracy Fellow at The
Century Foundation.
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