How prevalent is voter fraud?
What best practices can states implement to combat voter fraud?
What kinds of voter suppression have occurred recently?
Are there criminal penalties?
Are they enforced?
How prevalent is voter fraud?
There is very little systematic data to tell us how widespread voter fraud
actually is; most evidence of individuals attempting to subvert the election
system is anecdotal. For this reason, the debate surrounding voter fraud and
its supposed remedy, voter identification, often gets mired in politically partisan
rhetoric rather than facts.
Nonetheless, the evidence that exists suggests voter fraud at the polling place
is a relatively minor problem in American elections. The historically close
2004 gubernatorial election in Washington state resulted in a long litigation
that involved extensive investigation of voter fraud. Of the 1678 illegal votes
uncovered in this investigation, about 1 percent were cast fraudulently, either
as "double votes" or on behalf of deceased voters; the rest of the votes were
improperly included in the ballot tally as a result of errors on the part of
election officials. In addition, a survey produced by the Coalition on Homelessness
and Housing and the League of Women Voters of Ohio's 88 counties showed four
instances of fraudulent voting out of a total of nine million votes cast in
the state's 2002 and 2004 general elections.
Sources/More Information:
A Joint
Report on Election Reform Activities 
(Coalition on Homelessness and Housing in Ohio, League of Women Voters of
Ohio) June 14, 2005
What best practices can states implement
to combat voter fraud?
As a means of dealing with the perceived problem of voter fraud, many
states are currently passing legislation requiring all voters to produce some
form of identification—sometimes insisting upon government issued photo identification—when
they go to vote. While these restrictive voter identification requirements can
often disenfranchise eligible voters (for more on this topic see the section
on voter ID) there are policies states can implement to guard against voter
fraud that make the election system as a whole more secure without disenfranchising
voters who lack standard forms of identification.
- Technology: Upgrading the linkages between local and state voter
registration databases and the electronic databases of other state agencies
can significantly cut down on the number of duplicate and ineligible registrations
on the rolls. Providing access to these databases at the local polling places
themselves (via laptop) can head off fraudulent voting at the polls as well.
- Enforcement: Strengthening the prosecution of actual cases of fraud
and enforcing voter fraud laws will help to deter potential fraud.
- Election Day Registration: Although many people believe the myth
that allowing voters to register to vote on Election Day increases voter fraud,
Election Day Registration (EDR) actually can prevent fraud because it puts
registration under the direct supervision of trained election officials, rather
than allowing workers at the Department of Motor Vehicles and other sites
to control voter registration. Studies show that states offering EDR report
very few incidents of fraud, while their turnout is nearly ten points higher
than average turnout in states that do not offer EDR.
- Absentee Ballot Security: Many states consider absentee ballot fraud
a more serious threat than polling place fraud. Some states, such as Oregon,
which conducts its elections entirely by mail, have successfully implemented
systems to prevent fraud. Absentee ballots cannot be forwarded, and each voter
must sign an outside envelope that is later verified using a computer signature
on record. The state requires ballot drop boxes, set up so voters can save
on stamps by hand-delivering them, to be labeled as "official" if they have
been set up by elections administrators and "unofficial" when they are
set up by outside groups.
What kinds of voter suppression have
occurred recently?
In the 2004 election there were many reports of voter suppression and intimidation,
though incidents such as these have occurred throughout American history:
- Challenges: Making use of an obscure law allowing challenges to an
individual's right to vote, the Republican Party in Ohio preemptively disputed
the registrations of more than 35,000 first-time voters from predominantly
Democratic and minority areas, requiring them to appear in court to defend
their eligibility to vote just days before the election. The GOP also announced
plans to dispatch people to polling sites to challenge registrations of pre-selected
voters in person—these plans were the subject of several last-minute
lawsuits. Similar challenges also occurred in a number of other states, including
Florida and Wisconsin.
- Voter Registration Suppression: In Nevada, according to press reports,
workers for a Republican funded private voter registration company that targeted
registration efforts at Republicans destroyed forms filled out by Democrats.
In Florida, several thousand students and other potential voters found that
their party affiliations and addresses had been changed on their registration
forms.
- Deception: In African-American neighborhoods of Milwaukee, a flier
purportedly from the "Milwaukee Black Voters League" was distributed,
reading,
SOME WARNINGS FOR ELECTION TIME
IF YOU'VE ALREADY VOTED IN ANY ELECTION THIS YEAR YOU CAN'T VOTE IN
THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION.
IF YOU [OR ANYBODY IN YOUR FAMILY] HAVE EVER BEEN FOUND GUILTY OF
ANYTHING, EVEN A TRAFFIC VIOLATION, YOU CAN'T VOTE IN THE PRESIDENTIAL
ELECTION.
. . . IF YOU VIOLATE ANY OF THESE LAWS YOU CAN GET TEN YEARS IN PRISON
AND YOUR CHILDREN WILL BE TAKEN AWAY FROM YOU.
Letters sent on fake NAACP letterhead warned African-American voters
that they would be arrested if they tried to vote and had outstanding
parking tickets or had not paid child support.
In Pennsylvania, leaflets were distributed on fake county letterhead in a
mall, announcing that Republicans should vote on Tuesday, November 2, and
Democrats should vote on Wednesday November 3. A similar incident occurred
in Cleveland, where letters printed on fake Board of Elections letterhead
warned that registrations through the Kerry campaign, America Coming Together,
and the NAACP were invalid.
Sources/More Information:
Color It Wrong
Steve Carbo (Demos) December 22, 2004
Election
2004: A Report Card
Tova Wang (The Century Foundation) January 4, 2005
Voter
Suppression and Intimidation 
Panel Discussion Transcript (Voting in 2004: A Report to the Nation on America’s
Election Process) December 7, 2004
Are there criminal penalties?
The Voting Rights Act of 1965 states that "no person […] shall intimidate,
threaten, or coerce, or attempt to intimidate, threaten, or coerce any person
for voting or attempting to vote." This legislation addresses some of the more
outright forms of intimidation, but sometimes intimidation is difficult to distinguish
from ordinary election-related activity. For example, in Florida, false allegations
of voter fraud led to fruitless investigations that involved sending uniformed
officers to the homes of African-American voters for questioning. Investigations
such as these have the effect of intimidating voters, by invoking memories,
especially for older African-Americans, of police persecution at the polls fifty
years ago, but they do not necessarily fall under the Voting Rights Act unless
it is clear that they were part of an intentional effort to intimidate voters.
Sources/More Information:
Efforts
to Suppress the Vote: An Overview
Edward B. Foley and Amber Lea Gosnell (Election Law @ Moritz) September 2004
Text
of Voting Rights Act of 1965
Are they enforced?
There has been a limited effort to investigate allegations of intimidation
and suppression, and to prosecute the responsible parties, especially after
the 2004 election, in which there were widespread reports of such tactics. However,
it is likely that these laws are under-enforced, both because they are difficult
to detect or difficult to prosecute.
Sources/More Information:
Nationwide
Election Incidents Database
(VoteProtect.org)
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