The Voter-ID Myth Crashes
The Voter-ID Myth Crashes
Enough non-citizens vote to decide close elections, a new study shows. Guess which party they favor?
Democrats
want everyone to vote: old, young, white, black, Hispanic, Asian,
citizen, non-citizen. Wait, what was that last one again? We’ll get to
that.
Voter-ID laws, passed by thirty states so far, are
efforts by legislatures to ensure the integrity of votes. Being asked to
show a photo ID can diminish several kinds of fraud, including
impersonation, duplicate registrations in different jurisdictions, and
voting by ineligible people including felons and non-citizens.
The
Democrats have made a number of arguments against voter-ID laws. They
argue a) that the problem of voter impersonation or in-person voter
fraud is nonexistent; b) that black and poor voters are more likely than
others to lack a valid ID; and c) that Republicans are attempting to
“suppress” the votes of Democratic constituencies in a bid to revive Jim
Crow.
To believe a), you must assume that Americans, who engage in
widespread tax evasion (an estimated $2 trillion in income goes
unreported), insurance fraud (an estimated $80 billion dollar’s worth in
2006), identity theft (15 million victims annually), and thousands of
other deceptions and crimes large and small are perfect angels when they
step into the voting booth. Vote fraud simply “doesn’t exist,”
pronounced Attorney General Eric Holder.It’s extremely
difficult to track vote fraud. Most states put only half-hearted efforts
into purging their voter-registration rolls of the dead or those who’ve
moved out of state. Prosecutions for vote fraud are rare. But
prosecutions for perjury are rare, too — and not because it “doesn’t
exist.” Earlier this year, the Virginia Voters Alliance found that more
than 44,000 people were simultaneously registered to vote in Maryland
and Virginia. Catherine Englebrecht’s True the Vote found some 6.9
million overlapping voter registrations in the 28 states they examined.
For those unburdened by conscience who live close to the border, it’s
more than possible to vote early and often.
Being registered in
more than one jurisdiction doesn’t prove that you committed fraud, only
that you’ve arranged things to permit it or that you’ve overlooked,
perhaps by absent-mindedness, this detail of good citizenship. But
persuasive evidence that vote fraud is both real and consequential has
appeared. A new academic paper published in the journal Electoral Studies
provides evidence of voting by non-citizens that directly contradicts
the Democrats’ “nothing to see here” mantra. Under the neutral headline
“Do Non-Citizens Vote in U.S. Elections?” three professors from Virginia
universities answer in the affirmative. Using an enormous database of
voters nationwide (32,800 from 2008, and 55,400 in 2012), the authors
find that about one-quarter of the non-citizens who participated in the
survey were registered to vote.
Studying survey responses, the authors judge that non-citizen voters tend to favor Democratic candidates by large margins.
In
many states, their participation wouldn’t be large enough to make a
difference, but in North Carolina in 2008, the authors calculate,
non-citizens may well have tipped the state into Obama’s column. “So
what?” you may say. Even if John McCain had won that state, it wouldn’t
have changed the outcome of the national election. True, but remember
the presidential race in 2000? Remember “hanging chad” Florida?
Several
House seats, and one very significant Senate seat, were probably won by
Democrats on the strength of illegal votes. In 2008, the authors note,
Senator Al Franken won by just 312 votes in Minnesota. That seat was the
sixtieth vote to give Democrats a filibuster-proof supermajority to
pass major legislation such as Obamacare. “[Voting] participation by
just 0.65 percent of non-citizens in Minnesota is sufficient to account
for the entirety of Franken’s margin,” the authors write. “Our best
guess is that nearly ten times as many voted.”
Voter-ID laws will
not prevent non-citizens from voting. Green-card holders and even
illegal aliens get driver’s licenses. But that’s not an argument against
voter ID. It’s an argument for issuing driver’s licenses that specify
non-citizenship.
As for blacks being “targeted” by voter-ID laws, a
study by Reuters found almost no difference (2 versus 3 percent) in the
number of white and black voters who lacked ID.
Voting is a
semi-sacred act of civic religion. Trust that only those eligible are
determining our future as a nation is the foundation of civic peace.
Voter-ID laws should be just one part of ensuring voter integrity. When
Democrats resist those measures, it only feeds suspicion that they’re
trying to steal elections.
The HiV of Western Culture
4 years ago
No comments:
Post a Comment