From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Voter suppression in the United States concerns various legal and illegal efforts to prevent eligible voters from exercising their right to vote. Where found, such voter suppression efforts vary by state, local government, precinct, and election. Separately, there have also been various efforts to enfranchise and disenfranchise various voters in the country, which concern whether or not people are eligible to vote in the first place.
Following the loss of Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential elections, Republicans have passed or attempted to pass many laws restricting voter access, and have received condemnation and accusations of engaging in voter suppression. According to the Brennan Center for Justice, as of March 24, 2021, more than 361 bills that would restrict voting access have been introduced in 47 states.
Methods
Historical
The passage of the Fifteenth Amendment in 1870 guaranteed the right to vote to men of all races, including former slaves. Initially, this resulted in high voter turnout among African-Americans in the South. In the 1880 United States presidential election,
a majority of eligible African-American voters cast a ballot in every
Southern state except for two. In eight Southern states, Black turnout
was equal to or greater than White turnout. At the end of the Reconstruction era, Southern states began implementing policies to suppress Black voters.
After 1890, less than 9,000 of Mississippi's 147,000 eligible
African-American voters were registered to vote, or about 6%. Louisiana
went from 130,000 registered African-American voters in 1896 to 1,342 in
1904 (about a 99% decrease).
Poll taxes
Poll taxes were used to disenfranchise voters, particularly African-Americans and poor whites in the South. Poll taxes started in the 1890s, requiring eligible voters to pay a fee before casting a ballot. Some poor whites were grandfathered in if they had an ancestor who voted before the Civil War era. This meant that they were exempt from paying the tax.
Eleven Southern states (Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and
Virginia), as well as several outside the South, imposed poll taxes. The
poll tax mechanism varied on a state-by-state basis; in Alabama, the
poll tax was cumulative, meaning that a man had to pay all poll taxes
due from the age of twenty-one onward in order to vote. In other states,
poll taxes had to be paid for several years before being eligible to
vote. Enforcement of poll tax laws was patchy. Election officials had
the discretion whether or not to ask for a voter's poll tax receipt.
The constitutionality of the poll tax was upheld by the Supreme Court in the 1937 Breedlove v. Suttles and again affirmed in 1951 by a federal court in Butler v. Thompson.
Poll taxes began to wane in popularity despite judicial affirmations,
with five Southern states keeping poll taxes by 1962 (Alabama, Arkansas,
Mississippi, Texas, and Virginia). The poll tax was officially prohibited in 1964 by the Twenty-fourth Amendment.
Literacy tests
Like poll taxes, literacy tests were primarily used to disenfranchise poor or African-American voters in the South.
African-American literacy rates lagged behind White literacy rates
until 1940. Literacy tests were applied unevenly: property owners were
often exempt, as well as those who would have had the right to vote (or
whose ancestors had the right to vote) in 1867, which was before the
passage of the Fifteenth Amendment. Some states exempted veterans of the
Civil War from tests. Literacy tests varied in difficulty, with
African-Americans often given more rigorous tests. In Macon County, Alabama
in the late 1950s, for example, at least twelve whites who had not
finished elementary school passed the literacy test, while several
college-educated African-Americans were failed. Literacy tests were
prevalent outside the South as well, as they were seen as keeping
society's undesirables (the poor, immigrants, or the uninformed) from
voting; twenty states still had literacy tests after World War II,
including seven Southern states, California, Connecticut, Massachusetts,
and New York. A 1970 Amendment to the Voting Rights Act prohibited the use of literacy tests for determining voting eligibility.
Contemporary
Purging of voter rolls
In 1998, Florida created the Florida Central Voter File
to combat vote fraud documented in the 1997 Miami mayoral election.
Many people were purged from voter registration lists in Florida because
their names were similar to those of convicted felons, who were not
allowed to vote at that time under Florida law. According to the Palm Beach Post,
African-Americans accounted for 88% of those removed from the rolls but
were only about 11% of Florida's voters. However, according to the
Florida Department of Law Enforcement, nearly 89% of felons convicted in
Florida are black; therefore, a purge of convicted felons could be
expected to include a disproportionately high number of blacks. The Post
added that "a review of state records, internal e-mails of DBT
employees and testimony before the civil rights commission and an
elections task force showed no evidence that minorities were
specifically targeted".
Between November 2015 and early 2016, over 120,000 voters were dropped from rolls in Brooklyn, New York.
Officials have stated that the purge was a mistake and that those
dropped represented a "broad cross-section" of the electorate. However,
an WNYC analysis found that the purge had disproportionately affected
majority-Hispanic districts. The board announced that it would reinstate
all voters in time for the 2016 congressional primary.
The Board of Elections subsequently suspended the Republican appointee
in connection to the purge, but kept on her Democratic counterpart.
In 2008, more than 98,000 registered Georgia
voters were removed from the roll of voters because of discrepancies in
computer records of their identification information. Some 4,500
voters had to prove their citizenship to regain their right to vote.
Georgia was challenged
for requesting more Social Security-based verifications than any other
state—about 2 million voters in total. An attorney involved in the
lawsuit said that since the letters were mailed within 90 days of the
election, Georgia violated federal law. The director of the American
Civil Liberty Union's Georgia Voting Rights Project said, "They are
systematically using these lists and matching them and using those
matches to send these letters out to voters. They're using a systematic
purging procedure that's expressly prohibited by federal laws, if people
who are properly eligible are getting improperly challenged and purged.
Elise Shore, a regional attorney for the Mexican American Legal Defense
and Educational Fund (MALDEF), agreed the letters appear to violate two
federal laws against voter purging within 90 days of the election.
People are being targeted, and people are being told they are
non-citizens, including both naturalized citizens and U.S.-born
citizens," said Shore. "They're being told they're not eligible to vote,
based on information in a database that hasn't been checked and
approved by the Department of Justice (DOJ), and that we know has flaws
in it." Secretary of State Karen Handel denied that the removal of voters' names was an instance of voter suppression.
In 2019, presiding circuit court Judge Paul V. Malloy of Ozaukee County, Wisconsin, removed 234,000 voters from the statewide rolls, ruling that state law compelled him to do so.
Limitations on early and absentee voting
In
North Carolina, Republican lawmakers requested data on various voting
practices, broken down by race. They then passed laws that restricted
voting and registration many ways that disproportionately affected
African Americans, including cutting back on early voting. In a 2016 appellate court
case, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit struck down a
law that removed the first week of early voting. The court held that the
GOP used the data they gathered to remove the first week of early
voting because more African American voters voted during that week, and
African American voters were more likely to vote for Democrats. Between 2008 and 2012 in North Carolina, 70% of African American voters voted early. After cuts to early voting, African American turnout in early voting was down by 8.7% (around 66,000 votes) in North Carolina.
As of 2020, Georgia requires absentee voters to provide their own postage for their ballots. On April 8, 2020, the ACLU filed a lawsuit challenging this rule, claiming it "is tantamount to a poll tax."
Voting procedure disinformation
Voting
procedure disinformation involves giving voters false information about
when and how to vote, leading them to fail to cast valid ballots.
For example, in recall elections for the Wisconsin State Senate in 2011, Americans for Prosperity, a conservative political advocacy group founded in 2004 by brothers Charles and David Koch to support Republican candidates and causes in the United States, sent many Democratic voters a mailing that gave an incorrect deadline for returning absentee ballots. Voters who relied on the deadline in the mailing could have sent in their ballots too late for them to be counted. The organization claimed that it was caused by a typographical error.
Just prior to the 2018 elections, The New York Times
warned readers of numerous types of deliberate misinformation, sometimes
targeting specific voter demographics. These types of disinformation
included false information about casting ballots online by email and by
text message, the circulation of doctored photographs in 2016 which
claimed Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(ICE) agents were arresting voters at polling places and included
threatening language meant to intimidate Latino voters, polling place
hoaxes, disinformation on remote voting options, suspicious texts,
voting machine malfunction rumors, misleading photos and videos, and
false voter fraud allegations. The Times added that messages
purportedly sent by Trump to voters in Indiana, Kansas, Michigan, and
Georgia were actually disseminated from Republican organizations. In
2018, Trump actually spread information about defective machines in a
single Utah county, giving the impression that such difficulties were
occurring nationwide.
Caging lists
Caging lists have been used by political parties to eliminate
potential voters registered with other political parties. A political
party sends registered mail
to addresses of registered voters. If the mail is returned as
undeliverable, the mailing organization uses that fact to challenge the
registration, arguing that because the voter could not be reached at the
address, the registration is fraudulent.
Identification requirements
Some states have imposed photo ID requirements, which critics claim
are intended to depress the turnout of minority voters. It has been
explored whether or not photo ID laws disproportionately affect
non-white voters and those of lower income: 8% of White Americans lack
driver's licenses, for example, compared to 25% of African-American
citizens.
For driver's licenses that are unexpired where the stated address and
name exactly match the voter registration record, 16% of White Americans
lack a valid license, compared to 27% of Latinos and 37% for African
Americans.
In July 2016, a federal appeals court found that a 2011 Texas voter ID
law discriminated against black and Hispanic voters because only a few
types of ID were allowed; for example, military IDs and concealed carry permits were allowed, but state employee photo IDs and university photo IDs were not.
In August 2017, an updated version of the same Texas voter ID law was
found unconstitutional in federal district court; the district judge
indicated that one potential remedy for the discrimination would be to
order Texas election-related laws to be pre-cleared by the U.S.
Department of Justice (DOJ).
The court also ruled that the law would force some voters to spend
money traveling to a government office to update their identification
information; the court compared this provision to a poll tax.
During the 21st century, Wisconsin and North Carolina – states
with Republican-controlled governments – passed laws that restrict the
ability of people to vote using student ID cards for identification.
This is likely motivated by the fact that students tend to be more
liberal than the general population.
A 2019 paper by University of Bologna and Harvard Business School
economists found that voter ID laws had "no negative effect on
registration or turnout, overall or for any group defined by race,
gender, age, or party affiliation." A 2019 study in the journal Electoral Studies found that the implementation of voter ID laws in South Carolina reduced overall turnout but did not have a disparate impact. 2019 studies in Political Science Quarterly and the Atlantic Economic Journal found no evidence that voter ID laws have a disproportionate influence on minorities, while other studies show differently. These claims are contradicted by the "Findings of fact and conclusions of law" in Fish v. Kobach: In that case, Judge Julie Robinson, who had been appointed to the bench by President George W. Bush,
a Republican, noted that the Kansas Documentary Proof of Citizenship
law illegally denied 12.4% of new voter registration applications, over
31,000 US citizens, during the period covered by data considered in that
case.
Historical examples
1838 Gallatin County Election Day Battle
William Peniston, a candidate for the Missouri state legislature, made disparaging statements about the Mormons and warned them not to vote in the election. Reminding Daviess County
residents of the growing electoral power of the Mormon community,
Peniston made a speech in Gallatin claiming that if the Missourians
"suffer such men as these [Mormons] to vote, you will soon lose your
suffrage." Around 200 non-Mormons gathered in Gallatin on election day
to prevent Mormons from voting.
When about 30 Latter Day Saints approached the polling place, a
Missourian named Dick Weldon declared that Mormons were not allowed to
vote in Clay County.
One of the Mormons present, Samuel Brown, claimed that Peniston's
statements were false and then declared his intention to vote. This
triggered a brawl between the bystanders. The Mormons called upon the Danites, a Mormon vigilante group, and the Missourians left the scene to obtain guns and ammunition and swore to kill the Mormons.
Rumors among both parties spread that there were casualties in
the conflict. When Joseph Smith and volunteers rode to Adam-ondi-Ahman
to assess the situation, they discovered there were no truths to the
rumors.
Jim Crow laws
Jim Crow laws were state and local laws that enforced racial segregation in the Southern United States. All were enacted in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by white Democratic-dominated state legislatures after the Reconstruction period. The laws were enforced until 1965.
The origin of the phrase "Jim Crow" has often been attributed to "Jump Jim Crow", a song-and-dance caricature of blacks performed by white actor Thomas D. Rice in blackface, which first surfaced in 1832 and was used to satirize Andrew Jackson's populist policies. As a result of Rice's fame, "Jim Crow"
by 1838 had become a pejorative expression meaning "Negro". When
southern legislatures passed laws of racial segregation directed against
blacks at the end of the 19th century, these statutes became known as Jim Crow laws.
During the Reconstruction period of 1865–1877, federal laws provided civil rights protections in the U.S. South for freedmen,
the African Americans who had formerly been slaves, and the minority of
blacks who had been free before the war. In the 1870s, Democrats gradually regained power in the Southern legislatures, having used insurgent paramilitary groups, such as the White League and the Red Shirts, to disrupt Republican organizing, run Republican officeholders out of town, and intimidate blacks to suppress their voting.
In 1877, a national Democratic Party compromise to gain Southern support in the presidential election (a corrupt bargain)
resulted in the government's withdrawing the last of the federal troops
from the South. White Democrats had regained political power in every
Southern state.
Blacks were still elected to local offices throughout the 1880s,
but their voting was suppressed for state and national elections.
Democrats passed laws to make voter registration and electoral rules
more restrictive, with the result that political participation by most
blacks and many poor whites began to decrease. Between 1890 and 1910, ten of the eleven former Confederate states, starting with Mississippi, passed new constitutions or amendments that effectively disenfranchised most blacks and tens of thousands of poor whites through a combination of poll taxes, literacy and comprehension tests, and residency and record-keeping requirements.
Voter turnout dropped drastically through the South as a result
of such measures. In Louisiana, by 1900, black voters were reduced to
5,320 on the rolls, although they comprised the majority of the state's
population. By 1910, only 730 blacks were registered, less than 0.5% of
eligible black men. "In 27 of the state's 60 parishes, not a single
black voter was registered any longer; in 9 more parishes, only one
black voter was." The cumulative effect in North Carolina
meant that black voters were completely eliminated from voter rolls
during the period from 1896 to 1904. The growth of their thriving middle
class was slowed. In North Carolina and other Southern states, blacks
suffered from being made invisible in the political system: "[W]ithin a
decade of disfranchisement, the white supremacy campaign had erased the image of the black middle class from the minds of white North Carolinians." In Alabama
tens of thousands of poor whites were also disenfranchised, although
initially legislators had promised them they would not be affected
adversely by the new restrictions.
In some cases, progressive measures ostensibly intended to reduce election fraud, such as the Eight Box Law in South Carolina, acted against black and white voters who were illiterate, as they could not follow the directions. While the separation of African Americans from the white general population was becoming legalized and formalized during the Progressive Era
(1890s–1920s), it was also becoming customary. For instance, even in
cases in which Jim Crow laws did not expressly forbid black people to
participate in sports or recreation, a segregated culture had become
common.
The Voting Rights Act of 1965,
passed by huge bipartisan majorities in both houses of Congress and
signed by President Lyndon Johnson, aimed to end these practices.
A key provision of the act required that states with a history of
disenfranchising black voters, namely those in the Jim Crow South,
submit to the Department of Justice for "pre-clearance" any proposed
changes to state voting laws. This provision was overturned by the
Supreme Court in the case of Shelby County v. Holder (2013).
In her dissenting opinion, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg argued,
“Throwing out preclearance when it has worked and is continuing to work
to stop discriminatory changes is like throwing away your umbrella in a
rainstorm because you are not getting wet."
1980s
In 1980, Republican Christian Conservative leader Paul Weyrich said, "I don't want everybody to vote. ... our leverage in the elections ... goes up as the voting populace goes down."
In 1981 and 1986, the Republican National Committee (RNC) sent out letters to African-American neighborhoods.
When tens of thousands of them were returned undeliverable, the party
successfully challenged the voters and had them deleted from voting
rolls. The violation of the Voting Rights Act got the RNC taken to court by the Democratic National Committee (DNC). As a result of the case, the RNC entered a consent decree,
which prohibited the party from engaging in anti-fraud initiatives that
targeted minorities from conducting mail campaigns to "compile voter
challenge lists."
Modern examples
2002 New Hampshire Senate election phone jamming scandal
In the 2002 New Hampshire Senate election phone jamming scandal,
Republican officials attempted to reduce the number of Democratic
voters by paying professional telemarketers in Idaho to make repeated
hang-up calls to the telephone numbers used by the Democratic Party's
ride-to-the-polls phone lines on election day. By tying up the lines,
voters seeking rides from the Democratic Party would have more
difficulty reaching the party to ask for transportation to and from
their polling places.
2004 presidential election
Allegations surfaced in several states that a private group, Voters Outreach of America,
which had been empowered by the individual states, had collected and
submitted Republican voter registration forms while inappropriately
discarding voter registration forms where the new voter had chosen to
register with the Democratic Party. Such people would believe they had
registered to vote, and would only discover on election day that they
were not registered and could not cast a ballot.
Michigan Republican state legislator John Pappageorge was quoted as saying, "If we do not suppress the Detroit vote, we're going to have a tough time in this election."
In 2006, four employees of candidate John Kerry's campaign were convicted of slashing the tires of 25 vans rented by the Wisconsin state Republican Party
which were to be used for driving Republican voters and monitors to the
polls on Election Day 2004. They received jail terms of four to six
months. At the campaign workers' sentencing, Judge Michael B. Brennan
told the defendants, "Voter suppression has no place in our country.
Your crime took away that right to vote for some citizens."
2006 Virginia Senate election
During the Virginia U.S. Senate election,
Secretary of the Virginia State Board of Elections Jean Jensen
concluded that incidents of voter suppression appeared widespread and
deliberate. Documented incidents of voter suppression include:
- Democratic voters receiving calls incorrectly informing them voting will lead to arrest.
- Widespread calls fraudulently claiming to be "[Democratic Senate
candidate Jim] Webb Volunteers," falsely telling voters their voting
location had changed.
- Fliers paid for by the Republican Party, stating "SKIP THIS ELECTION" that allegedly attempted to suppress African-American turnout.
The FBI has since launched an investigation into the suppression attempts. Despite the allegations, Democrat Jim Webb narrowly defeated incumbent George Allen.
2008 presidential election
Michigan
On
September 16, 2008, attorneys for then-Democratic presidential
candidate Barack Obama announced their intention to seek an injunction
to stop an alleged caging scheme in Michigan. It was alleged that the
Michigan Republican Party used home foreclosure lists to challenge
voters who used their foreclosed homes as their primary addresses at the
polls. Michigan GOP officials called the suit "desperate".
The Democratic party eventually dropped the case, instead accepting a
non-legally binding public agreement from the Michigan GOP to not engage
in foreclosure-based voter challenges.
On October 30, 2008, a federal appeals court ordered the
reinstatement of 5,500 voters wrongly purged from the voter rolls by the
state, in response to an ACLU of Michigan lawsuit which questioned the
legality of a Michigan state law requiring local clerks to nullify the
registrations of newly registered voters whenever their voter
identification cards are returned by the post office as undeliverable.
Minnesota
The conservative nonprofit Minnesota Majority reportedly made phone calls claiming that the Minnesota Secretary of State had concerns about the validity of voters' registration. Their actions were referred to the Ramsey County attorney's office.
Pennsylvania
On Election Day 2008, at a polling station in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, two members of the New Black Panther Party (NBPP)—Minister
King Samir Shabazz and Jerry Jackson—stood in front of the entrance to a
polling station in uniforms that have been described as military or paramilitary. Shabazz carried a billy club, and was reported to have pointed it at voters and shouted racial slurs, including phrases such as "white devil" and "you're about to be ruled by the black man, cracker".
The incident drew the attention of police, who around 10:00 am, sent
Shabazz away, in part because of his billy club. Jackson was allowed to
stay because he was a certified poll watcher and was not accused of
intimidation. Stephen Robert Morse, upon arriving at the scene, filmed Shabazz. The incident gained national attention after the video was uploaded to YouTube and went viral with over a million views. The Philadelphia incident became known as the New Black Panther Party voter intimidation case.
No complaints were filed by voters about the incident, though
poll watchers witnessed some voters approach the polls and then turn
away, apparently in response to the NBPP members.
Nevertheless, the Bush administration's Department of Justice (DOJ)
became aware of the incident and started an inquiry. In January 2009,
less than two weeks before the Bush Administration left office,
Christopher Coates of the DOJ's Civil Rights Division filed a civil suit under the Voting Rights Act against four defendants, including Shabazz. There was no evidence that Shabazz's actions were directed or incited by the party or its national leader.
Although none of the defendants challenged the lawsuit, the Obama
administration dropped its claims against all but Shabazz in May 2009.
In response to the controversy, the NBPP suspended its
Philadelphia chapter and repudiated Minister King Shabazz in a posting
at its website. In December 2010, the Civil Rights Commission
released a report concluding that their investigations had uncovered
"numerous specific examples of open hostility and opposition" within the
Obama DOJ to pursue cases in which whites were victims. The report
accused the DOJ of failing to cooperate with investigations into its
reason for dropping the case.
Wisconsin
The
Republican Party attempted to have all 60,000 voters in the heavily
Democratic city of Milwaukee who had registered since January 1, 2006
deleted from the voter rolls. The requests were rejected by the
Milwaukee Election Commission, although Republican commissioner Bob
Spindell voted in favor of deletion.
2010 Maryland gubernatorial election
In the Maryland gubernatorial election in 2010, the campaign of Republican candidate Bob Ehrlich
hired a consultant who advised that "the first and most desired outcome
is voter suppression", in the form of having "African-American voters
stay home." To that end, the Republicans placed thousands of Election Day robocalls to Democratic voters, telling them that the Democratic candidate, Martin O'Malley, had won, although in fact the polls were still open for some two more hours.
The Republicans' call, worded to seem as if it came from Democrats,
told the voters, "Relax. Everything's fine. The only thing left is to
watch it on TV tonight." The calls reached 112,000 voters in majority-African American areas. In 2011, Ehrlich's campaign manager, Paul Schurick, was convicted of fraud and other charges because of the calls. In 2012, he was sentenced to 30 days of home detention, a one-year suspended jail sentence, and 500 hours of community service over the four years of his probation, with no fine or jail time. The Democratic candidate won by a margin of more than 10 percent.
2015 early voting controversy in Maryland
In
Maryland's Montgomery County, Republicans planned to move two
early-voting sites from densely populated Bethesda and Burtonsville to
more sparsely populated areas in Brookeville and Potomac. They claimed
to be aiming for more "geographic diversity"; Democrats accused them of
trying to suppress the vote. The Burtonsville site had the most minority
voters of all the early-voting sites in the county, while the proposed
new locations were in more Republican-friendly areas with fewer minority
residents.
The Republican election board chairman admitted at a County Council
committee that he and two GOP colleagues held a conference call with the
chairman of Montgomery's Republican Party Central Committee. They said
the call, from which Democrats were excluded, was legal. Democrats
called it a violation of Maryland's Open Meetings Act. Todd Eberly, a
political science professor from Saint Mary's College, called the claim
by the Republicans, "a stupid defense."
2016 presidential election
The 2016 presidential election was the first in 50 years without all the protections of the original Voting Rights Act. Fourteen states had new voting restrictions in place, including swing states such as Virginia and Wisconsin.
Kansas
In early
2016, a state judge struck down a law requiring voters to show proof of
citizenship in cases where the voter had used a national voter
registration form. In May, a federal judge ordered the state of Kansas
to begin registering approximately 18,000 voters whose registrations had
been delayed because they had not shown proof of citizenship. Kansas
secretary of state Kris Kobach
ordered that the voters be registered, but not for state and local
elections. In July, a county judge struck down Kobach's order. Kobach
has been repeatedly sued by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) for allegedly trying to restrict voting rights in Kansas.
In particular, Fish v. Kobach was filed in 2016 and heard in the United States District Court for the District of Kansas in 2018 by Chief District Judge Julie A. Robinson; she had been appointed to the bench by President George W. Bush,
a Republican. She found that Kobach's Documentary Proof of Citizenship
law had illegally refused to accept 12.4% of new voter registration
applications by US citizens while it was in effect, over 31,000 people,
to protect the "integrity" of elections from the threat of votes by 39
non-citizens who had registered to vote. Moreover, the "voting rate
among purported noncitizen registrations on [a Kansas temporary drivers
license] match list is around 1%, whereas the voting rate among
registrants in Kansas more generally is around 70%." She also noted
that Hans von Spakovsky, whom Kobach called as an expert witness, had made multiple misleading
statements, including claiming that a U.S. GAO study 'found that up to 3
percent of the 30,000 individuals called for jury duty from voter
registration roles over a two-year period in just one U.S. district
court were not U.S. citizens.' On cross-examination, however, he
acknowledged that the GAO study contained information on 8 district
courts, 4 of which had reported zero non-citizen called for jury duty,
and the other 3 reported that less than 1% of those called for jury duty
from voter rolls were noncitizens.
North Carolina
In 2013, the state House passed a bill that requires voters to show a photo ID issued by North Carolina,
a passport, or a military identification card to begin in 2016.
Out-of-state drivers licenses were to be accepted only if the voter
registered within 90 days of the election, and university photo
identification was not acceptable. In July 2016, a three-judge panel of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals
reversed a trial court decision in a number of consolidated actions and
struck down the law's photo ID requirement, finding that the new voting
provisions targeted African Americans "with almost surgical precision,"
and that the legislators had acted with clear "discriminatory intent"
in enacting strict election rules, shaping the rules based on data they
received about African-American registration and voting patterns. On May 15, 2017, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the Appeals Court ruling.
North Dakota
North Dakota abolished voter registration in 1951 for state and federal elections, the only state to do so.
It has since 2004 required voters to produce an approved form of ID
before being able to vote, one of which was a tribe ID commonly used by
Native Americans. However, it was common and lawful for a post office
box to be used on this ID instead of a residential address. This has led
to North Dakota being accused of voter suppression because many Native
American were being denied a vote because they did not have an approved
form of ID with a residential address.
North Dakota's ID law especially adversely affected large numbers
of Native Americans, with almost a quarter of Native Americans in the
state, otherwise eligible to vote, being denied a vote on the basis that
they do not have proper ID; compared to 12% of non-Indians. A judge
overturned the ID law in July 2016, also saying: "The undisputed
evidence before the Court reveals that voter fraud in North Dakota has
been virtually non-existent." However, the denial of a vote on this basis was also an issue in the 2018 mid-term election.
In the run-up to North Dakota's election for U.S. Senate in 2018,
state lawmakers implemented changes to voter identification rules,
citing nine "suspected" double voting cases. Under the new rules, voter
IDs had to include a residential address, rather than a post office box.
The change led to rebuke and lawsuits from Native American voters on a Turtle Mountain Chippewa reservation, as well as claims of partisanship from then-Senator Heidi Heitkamp,
a Democrat, as the law was championed by Republican state
representatives. The voters claimed discrimination, and in legal filings
cited a survey that indicated 18% of Native Americans lacked a valid ID
due to the new street address requirement, while the requirement only
affected 10.9% of non-Natives. The survey pinned the discrepancy on
higher poverty rates and lower transportation access in areas with
higher proportions of Native Americans. The legal battle quickly rose to
national attention. While former Attorney General Eric Holder
called the rule "nothing more than voter suppression", North Dakota
House Majority Leader Republican Al Carlson, who sponsored the law, said
"Our attempt was never to disenfranchise anybody. From a legislative
standpoint, we wanted the integrity ... in the ballots, but we also want
to have anybody that wants to vote that is a legal citizen be able to
identify where they live and be able to vote." Ultimately, the legal battle ended when the Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal in November 2018, which effectively left the rule in place. In July 2019, the ID law was judged to be constitutional. A settlement of the dispute was reached in February 2020.
Ohio
Since 1994, Ohio has had a policy of purging infrequent voters from
the rolls. In April 2016, a lawsuit was filed, challenging this policy
on the grounds that it violated the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA) and the Help America Vote Act of 2002.
In June, the federal district court ruled for the plaintiffs, and
entered a preliminary injunction applicable only to the November 2016
election. The preliminary injunction was upheld in September by the
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Had it not been upheld,
thousands of voters would have been purged from the rolls just a few
weeks before the election.
Wisconsin
Wisconsin has enforced a photo ID law for all elections since April 7, 2015.
A federal judge found that Wisconsin's restrictive voter ID law led to
"real incidents of disenfranchisement, which undermine rather than
enhance confidence in elections, particularly in minority communities";
and, given that there was no evidence of widespread voter impersonation
in Wisconsin, found that the law was "a cure worse than the disease." In
addition to imposing strict voter ID requirements, the law cut back on
early voting, required people to live in a ward for at least 28 days
before voting, and prohibited emailing absentee ballots to voters. A study by Priorities USA, a progressive
advocacy group, estimates that strict ID laws in Wisconsin led to a
significant decrease in voter turnout in 2016, with a disproportionate
effect on African-American and Democratic-leaning voters.
2017–2018
Election Integrity Commission and Crosscheck
In May 2017, President Donald Trump established the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity,
purportedly for the purpose of preventing voter fraud. Critics have
suggested its true purpose is voter suppression. The commission was led
by Kansas attorney general and Republican gubernatorial nominee Kris Kobach,
a staunch advocate of strict voter ID laws and a proponent of the
Crosscheck system. Crosscheck is a national database designed to check
for voters who are registered in more than one state by comparing names
and dates of birth. Researchers at Stanford University, the University
of Pennsylvania, Harvard University, and Microsoft found that for every
legitimate instance of double registration it finds, Crosscheck's
algorithm returns approximately 200 false positives. Kobach has been repeatedly sued by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and other civil rights organizations for trying to restrict voting rights in Kansas.
On February 20, 2016, while speaking to a committee of Kansas 2nd
Congressional District delegates, regarding their challenges of the
proof-of-citizenship voting law he championed in 2011, Kobach said, "The
ACLU and their fellow communist friends, the League of Women Voters—you can quote me on that, the communist League of Women Voters — the ACLU and the communist League of Women Voters sued".
Often, voter fraud is cited as a justification for such measures,
even when the incidence of voter fraud is low. In Iowa, lawmakers
passed a strict voter ID law with the potential to disenfranchise
260,000 voters. Out of 1.6 million votes cast in Iowa in 2016, there
were only 10 allegations of voter fraud; none were cases of
impersonation that a voter ID law could have prevented. Only one person,
a Republican voter, was convicted. Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate,
the architect of the bill, admitted, "We've not experienced widespread
voter fraud in Iowa."
Alabama
Alabama HB 56, an anti-illegal-immigration bill co-authored by Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach and passed in 2011, required proof of citizenship to be presented by voters on Election Day. Much of the law was invalidated on appeal at various levels of appeals courts or voluntarily withdrawn or reworded.
In its 2014 Shelby County v. Holder
decision, the Supreme Court of the United States allowed jurisdictions
with a history of suppression of minority voters to avoid continuing to
abide by federal preclearance requirements for changes in voter
registration and casting of ballots. Within 24 hours of that ruling,
Alabama implemented a previously-passed 2011 law requiring specific
types of photo identification to be presented by voters. The state
closed DMV offices in eight of ten counties which had the highest
percentage black population, but only three in the ten counties with the
lowest black population. In 2016, Alabama's Secretary of State (SOS) John Merrill
began the process to require proof of citizenship from voters, despite
Merrill saying he did not know of any cases where non-citizens had
voted. Four-term Republican Representative Mo Brooks
found that he himself had been purged from the rolls. Merrill also
declined to publicize the passage of legislation that enabled some
60,000 Alabamian former felons to vote. Alabama's requirement regarding proof of citizenship had been approved by federal Election Assistance Commission Director Brian Newby.
Kobach had supported Newby in the federal suit, and had appointed him
to an elections position in Kansas prior to his EAC appointment.
Alabama boasts the 3rd highest rate of people barred from voting
due to a felony conviction per 100,000 residents in each state across
the US, according to a recent study. This disproportionately affects African Americans. In 2018, critics accused the state of intentionally disenfranchising non-white voters. The suburban and rural outreach efforts by the Doug Jones campaign were successful and he captured the U.S. Senate seat, the first Democrat in 25 years to do so, and in a state that Donald Trump had won by 30 points.
Georgia
In Louisville, Georgia, in October 2018, Black senior citizens were told to get off a bus that was to have taken them to a polling place for early voting. The bus trip was supposed to have been part of the "South Rising" bus tour sponsored by the advocacy group Black Voters Matter. A clerk of the local Jefferson County Commission allegedly called the intended voters' senior center to claim that the bus tour constituted "political activity," which is barred at events sponsored by the county. LaTosha Brown,
one of the founders of Black Voters Matter, described the trip's
prevention as a clear-cut case of "...voter intimidation. This is voter
suppression, Southern style." The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund
sent a letter to the county calling for an "immediate investigation"
into the incident, which it condemned as, "an unacceptable act of voter
intimidation," that "potentially violates several laws."
Georgia's Secretary of State, Brian Kemp,
the Republican gubernatorial nominee, was the official in charge of
determining whether or not voters were allowed to vote in the November
2018 election and has been accused of voter suppression. Minority voters
are statistically more likely to have names that contain hyphens,
suffixes or other punctuation that can make it more difficult to match
their name in databases, experts noted, and are more likely to have
their voter applications suspended by Kemp's office. Barry C. Burden,
a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and director of its
Elections Research Center said, "An unrealistic rule of this sort will
falsely flag many legitimate registration forms. Moreover, the evidence
indicates that minority residents are more likely to be flagged than are
whites." Kemp has suspended the applications of 53,000 voters, a
majority of whom are minorities. Strict voter registration deadlines in
Georgia prevented 87,000 Georgians from voting because they had
registered after the deadline.
"Even if everyone who is on a pending list is eventually allowed to
vote, it places more hurdles in the way of those voters on the list, who
are disproportionately black and Hispanic," said Charles Stewart III,
Professor of Political Science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Indiana
In
2017, Indiana passed a law allowing the state to purge voters from the
rolls without notifying them, based on information from the
controversial Crosscheck system. The Indiana NAACP and League of Women Voters have filed a federal lawsuit against Connie Lawson, Indiana's Secretary of State, to stop the purges. In June 2018, a federal judge ruled that the law violated the National Voter Registration Act.
2019–2020
Georgia
Georgia made efforts to correct voting problems that had occurred in the 2018 election. In the 2020 statewide primary,
however, many irregularities were reported, including missing machines
at polling places and mail-in ballots that never arrived at voters'
houses. Georgia has a law prohibiting felons on probation for crimes involving moral turpitude from voting or registering to vote, with a similar law in Alabama having been criticized by the United States Supreme Court in 471 U.S. 222 (1985) as having roots in white supremacy.
Mississippi
In late June 2020, Gail Welch, a Jones County
election commissioner, posted a social media comment saying: "I'm
concerned about voter registration in Mississippi. The blacks are having
lots [of] events for voter registration. People in Mississippi have to
get involved, too." Welch later explained that she had meant to send the
message privately, not publicly, but also claimed that she was "trying
to strike a match under people and get them to vote," and told reporters
that whites have had high voter registration numbers "in the past."
Texas
In March 2020, it was reported that Texas
leads the South in closing down voting places, making it more difficult
for Democratic-leaning African-Americans and Latinos to vote. The 50
counties that have experienced the greatest increases in
African-American and Latino populations had 542 polling sites closed
between 2012 and 2018, while those with the lowest increases in minority
populations had only 34 closures. Brazoria County,
south of Houston, closed 60% of its polling places, below the statutory
minimum; the county clerk promised this would not happen again. Texas
law allows the centralization of vote centers, which sometimes make it
easier for people to vote. However, the 334 poll closures outside of
vote centers still put Texas ahead of Arizona, Georgia, Louisiana, and
Mississippi.
Texas limits who can request absentee postal ballots only to
voters over 65, those sick or disabled, those who will be out of the
county on election day and those who are in jail.
Attempts in court to expand mail in voting before the 2020 elections
because of health concerns during the COVID-19 pandemic have been
unsuccessful.
In addition, some eligible postal voters want to lodge postal ballots
in advance in drop-off points rather than rely on the postal service,
which had warned that ballot papers may not arrive in time to be counted
on election day. However, on October 1, Texas Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, ordered a limit of one drop-off location per county. Harris County, for example, received national media attention because it is larger than the size of Rhode Island and has 2.4 million registered voters but is being served by only one voting drop-box location.
On October 10, a judge blocked the order to allow only one absentee
vote drop-off point per county, on the basis that it would affect older
and disabled voters. A
Texas appeals court on October 23 confirmed the ruling that the
Republican governor cannot limit drop-off sites for mail ballots to one
per county.
Some prominent Texas Republicans sued Governor Abbott in
September 2020, seeking to limit the number of days early voting was
allowed in the state. They sought to push back the early voting start
date from October 13 to October 19. Early voting had been expanded by
the governor in July, in response to the pandemic and to the limits he
had imposed on mail in voting. The same lawsuit also sought to limit the
time frame for submitting mail-in ballots in person.
A similar lawsuit was filed by Houston Republicans a week later,
seeking the same restrictions on in person and absentee ballots in
Harris County.
The Texas Supreme Court ruled against the Republicans and allowed early
voting to take place from October 13 to October 30, 2020.
A conservative activist and three Republican candidates sued in
late October 2020 to have 127,000 drive-through ballots cast in
predominantly Democratic Harris County, tossed. A federal judge rejected the Republican lawsuit, as did the Texas Supreme Court.
Turnout in the 2020 Texas election increased by more than 6%,
breaking a 28-year record, with both major-party Presidential candidates
breaking records for the most votes ever cast for a candidate in Texas.
Wisconsin
In 2019, district court Judge Paul V. Malloy of Ozaukee County, Wisconsin removed 234,000 voters from state rolls. Wisconsin's Attorney General Josh Kaul appealed to halt the purge, on behalf of the Wisconsin Elections Commission.
The issue was brought before the court by the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty (WILL), a conservative organization mostly supported by the Bradley Foundation, which funds such political causes.
The lawsuit demanded that the Wisconsin Election Commission respond to a
"Movers Report," generated from voter data analysis produced by the
Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC), a national,
non-partisan partnership funded in 2012 by the Pew Charitable Trusts.
ERIC shares voter registration information to improve the accuracy of
voter rolls.
The report tagged 234,039 voters who may have moved to an address that
had not yet been updated on their voter registration forms. Despite thin
evidence for removal of that extraordinary number of qualified voters,
Wisconsin may be forced to comply with Malloy's order.
On January 2, 2020, WILL said it asked the circuit court to hold the
Elections Commission in contempt, fining it up to $12,000 daily, until
it advances Malloy's December 17, 2019 order to purge from the voting
rolls hundreds of thousands of registered voters who possibly have moved
to a different address.
The case being litigated in a state appeals court, but it was
thought that the conservative-dominated Wisconsin Supreme Court would be
likely to hear it.
The purge was claimed to be targeting voters in the cities of Madison
and Milwaukee, and college towns, which all tend to favor Democrats. Disenfranchisement expert Greg Palast ties the Wisconsin effort at voter purging as part of a national Republican strategy.
COVID-19 pandemic and voting by mail, 2020 US election
The COVID-19 pandemic in the United States
posed challenges for the 2020 election, with many states expanding
mail-in voting to avoid voters having to choose between not voting and
risking illness by voting in person. President Trump encouraged
restricting mail-in voting, and hundreds of lawsuits were filed
disputing whether witness requirements, arrival deadlines, the removal
of ballot drop-boxes, the reduction of polling places, and aggressive
rejection of "mismatched" signatures infringed the right to vote.
The large numbers of COVID-19 cases has postponed primary
elections. Voting by mail has become an increasingly common practice in
the United States, with 25% of voters nationwide mailing their ballots
in 2016 and 2018. The coronavirus pandemic of 2020 is believed to have
caused a large increase in mail voting because of the possible danger of
congregating at polling places. This method of voting-by-mail may
potentially be limited to residents. For the 2020 election, a
state-by-state analysis concluded that 76% of Americans would be
eligible to vote by mail in 2020, a record number. The analysis
predicted that 80 million ballots could be
cast by mail in 2020, more than double the number in 2016. Thus, voting
in 2020 may exclude minority groups such as homeless people, lower
socioeconomic groups, and people that are unable to register to vote via
the internet.
As an example, the state of New York, with a high spike of COVID cases,
has tried to cancel their primary elections and switched to
voting-by-mail.
The Postal Service sent a letter to multiple states in July 2020,
warning that the service would not be able to meet the state's
deadlines for requesting and casting last-minute absentee ballots. The
House voted to include an emergency grant of $25 billion to the post
office to facilitate the predicted flood of mail ballots. Trump conceded
that the post office would need additional funds to handle the
additional mail-in voting, and said he will not grant any additional
funding because he wanted to prevent any increase in balloting by mail.
As reported on the site Common Dreams, as an example of
occurrences across the country, the head of the Iowa Postal Workers
Union "alleged [Tuesday August 11, 2020] that mail sorting machines are
'being removed' from Post Offices in her state due to new policies
imposed by Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a major Republican donor to
President Donald Trump whose operational changes have resulted in
dramatic mail slowdowns across the nation. Asked by National Public
Radio's Noel King whether she has felt the impact of DeJoy's changes,
Iowa Postal Workers Union President Kimberly Karol—a 30-year Postal
Service veteran—answered in the affirmative, saying 'mail is beginning
to pile up in our offices, and we're seeing equipment being removed.'
Karol went on to specify that 'equipment that we use to process mail for
delivery'—including sorting machines—is being removed from Postal
Service facilities in Iowa as DeJoy rushes ahead with policies that,
according to critics, are sabotaging the Postal Service's day-to-day
operations less than 90 days before an election that could hinge on
mail-in ballots."
Due to the timing of the coronavirus pandemic with respect to the
2020 presidential election, the Brennan Center for Justice has
recommended that states establish contingency plans and pandemic task
forces to limit the impact the virus has on voter turnout.
The memorandum encourages the expansion of early voting and online
registration, and a universal vote-by mail option; especially for
at-risk groups. The memorandum recommends polling places remain open to
the extent permissible by public health mandates, to prevent the
disenfranchisement of those for whom voting by mail is difficult.
Fifteen states (Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island, West Virginia, Wyoming) and Puerto Rico have either delayed
their primary elections or switched to voting by mail with extended
deadlines.
The New York State Board of Elections decided to cancel the 2020
Democratic Primary as New York was experiencing a major outbreak
COVID-19 at the time. This decision was met with backlash from
supporters of Bernie Sanders' presidential campaign, since although
Sanders had suspended his campaign on April 8, he was still eligible to
receive delegates and thus influence the 2020 Democratic platform. The 2020 Democratic National Convention was pushed from its original June 9 date to the week of August 17th due to COVID-19.
In Wisconsin, Governor Tony Evers (D) issued an executive order
postponing in-person voting and extending the deadline for absentee
voting to June, in an attempt to limit the spread of the virus. However,
the Wisconsin state Supreme Court denied this order; a decision upheld
by the US Supreme Court one day before the primary election.
Aftermath of the 2020 election
After Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election, Republican lawmakers around the nation began attacking the voting methods used in the election.
Drawing on the false allegations of voting fraud and a stolen election,
by February 2021 Republican state legislatures had begun to implement
new laws and rules to restrict voting access in ways that would favor
Republican candidates. By April 2021, 361 bills in 47 states have been proposed by GOP lawmakers meant to restrict voting access.
In March 2021, John Kavanagh, a Republican elected to the Arizona
House of Representatives, justified restrictions on voting: "...
everybody shouldn’t be voting... Quantity is important, but we have to
look at the quality of votes, as well."
Anti-suppression efforts
Starting in 2015, various states enacted laws for automatic voter registration. At Politico's "State Solutions" voter engagement conference, former Secretary of State and Oregon Governor Kate Brown
said, "Registration is a barrier to people participating in this
process... [v]oting is a fundamental right of being a citizen, and
people across the country should have the ability to access this
fundamental right without barriers like registration." She emphatically
aimed at critics of policies such as Oregon's "motor voter"
law that are aimed at increasing voter turnout, saying, "I think the
good news is, in Oregon, we actually want people to vote in our state."
As of March 2021, Democrats in Congress were pursuing passage of the For The People Act,
which aims to create new national standards for elections, while
preventing common forms of voter suppression and easing access to
voting. They were also pursuing an update to the Voting Rights Act of 1965,
which had its federal preclearance mechanism for preventing racially
motivated voter suppression invalidated by the U.S. Supreme Court in
2013.
See also