Yes, voter fraud happens. But it's rare and election offices have
safeguards to catch it
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[October 10, 2024]
By ALI SWENSON
NEW YORK (AP) — You’ve heard the horror stories: Someone casting
multiple ballots, people voting in the name of dead relatives, mail-in
ballots being intercepted.
Voter fraud does happen occasionally. When it does, we tend to hear a
lot about it. It also gets caught and prosecuted.
The nation’s multilayered election processes provide many safeguards
that keep voter fraud generally detectable and rare, according to
current and former election administrators of both parties.
America’s elections are decentralized, with thousands of independent
voting jurisdictions. That makes it virtually impossible to pull off a
large-scale vote-rigging operation that could tip a presidential race —
or most any other race.
“You’re probably not going to have a perfect election system,” said
Republican Trey Grayson, a former Kentucky secretary of state and the
advisory board chair of the Secure Elections Project. “But if you’re
looking for one that you should have confidence in, you should feel good
about that here in America.”
What's stopping people from committing voter fraud?
Voting more than once, tampering with ballots, lying about your
residence to vote somewhere else or casting someone else’s ballot are
crimes that can be punished with hefty fines and prison time. Non-U.S.
citizens who break election laws can be deported.
For anyone still motivated to cheat, election systems in the United
States are designed with multiple layers of protection and transparency
intended to stand in the way.
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For in-person voting, most states either require or request voters
provide some sort of ID at the polls. Others require voters to verify
who they are in another way, such as stating their name and address,
signing a poll book or signing an affidavit.
People who try to vote in the name of a recently deceased friend or
family member can be caught when election officials update voter lists
with death records and obituaries, said Gail Pellerin, a Democratic in
the California Assembly who ran elections in Santa Cruz County for more
than 27 years.
Those who try to impersonate someone else run the risk that someone at
the polls knows that person or that the person will later try to cast
their own ballot, she said.
What protections exist for absentee voting?
For absentee voting, different states have different ballot verification
protocols. All states require a voter’s signature. Many states have
further precautions, such as having bipartisan teams compare the
signature with other signatures on file, requiring the signature to be
notarized or requiring a witness to sign.
That means even if a ballot is erroneously sent to someone’s past
address and the current resident mails it in, there are checks to alert
election workers to the foul play.
A growing number of states offer online or text-based ballot tracking
tools as an extra layer of protection, allowing voters to see when their
ballot has been sent out, returned and counted.
Federal law requires voter list maintenance, and election officials do
that through a variety of methods, from checking state and federal
databases to collaborating with other states to track voters who have
moved.
Ballot drop boxes have security protocols, too, said Tammy Patrick,
chief executive officer for programs at the National Association of
Election Officials.
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An election worker sorts vote-by-mail ballots at the Miami-Dade
County Board of Elections, Monday, Oct. 26, 2020, in Doral, Fla. (AP
Photo/Lynne Sladky, File)
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She explained the boxes are often designed to stop hands from
stealing ballots and are surveilled by camera, bolted to the ground
and constructed with fire-retardant chambers, so if someone threw in
a lit match, it wouldn’t destroy the ballots inside.
Sometimes, alleged voter fraud isn't what it seems
After the 2020 election, social media surged with claims of dead
people casting ballots, double voting or destroyed piles of ballots
on the side of the road.
Former President Donald Trump promoted and has continued to amplify
these claims. But the vast majority of them were found to be untrue.
An Associated Press investigation that explored every potential case
of voter fraud in the six battleground states disputed by Trump
found there were fewer than 475 out of millions of votes cast. That
was not nearly enough to tip the outcome. Democrat Joe Biden won the
six states by a combined 311,257 votes.
The review also showed no collusion intended to rig the voting.
Virtually every case was based on an individual acting alone to cast
additional ballots. In one case, a man mistakenly thought he could
vote while on parole. In another, a woman was suspected of sending
in a ballot for her dead mother.
Former election officials say that even more often, allegations of
voter fraud turn out to result from a clerical error or a
misunderstanding.
Pellerin said she remembered when a political candidate in her
county raised suspicion about many people being registered to vote
at the same address. It turned out the voters were nuns who all
lived in the same home.
Patrick said that when she worked in elections in Maricopa County,
Arizona, mismatched signatures were sometimes explained by a broken
arm or a recent stroke. In other cases, an elderly person tried to
vote twice because they forgot they had already submitted a mail
ballot.
“You really have to think about the intent of the voter,” Patrick
said. “It isn’t always intuitive.”
Why voter fraud is unlikely to affect the presidential race
It would be wrong to suggest that voter fraud never happens.
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With millions of votes cast in an election year, it's almost
guaranteed there will be a few cases of someone trying to game the
system. There also have been more insidious efforts, such as a
vote-buying scheme in 2006 in Kentucky.
In that case, Grayson said, voters complained and an investigation
ensued. Then participants admitted what they had done.
He said the example shows how important it is for election officials
to stay vigilant and constantly improve security in order to help
voters feel confident.
But, he said, it would be hard to make any such scheme work on a
larger scale. Fraudsters would have to navigate onerous nuances in
each county’s election system. They also would have to keep a large
number of people quiet about a crime that could be caught at any
moment by officials or observers.
“This decentralized nature of the elections is itself a deterrent,”
Grayson said.
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