Ken Paxton: Tackling Voter Fraud In Texas
By Randy Samuelson | 10/24/08 | 02:25 PM EDT | 0 Comments
This is from State Representative Ken Paxton's Capitol Steps Newsletter on October 24, 2008
Although Texans are beginning to cast ballots in the 2008 election, voters across the state and nation have ample reason to question whether their vote might be cancelled out by a fraudulent vote. It is incumbent upon state leaders in both parties to address those doubts by protecting the right to vote in the next Legislative session.
For too long, many legislators and activists have either turned a blind eye to election fraud or insist that it does not exist. Currently, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) has registered 1.3 million new voters nationwide and is active in Texas. ACORN is under federal investigation in multiple states for fraudulent voter registration, including registering the Dallas Cowboys' starting line-up in Nevada and a Mr. Mickey Mouse in Florida.
Voter registration lists in Texas are suspect as well. A November 2007 review by the State Auditor identified 49,049 registered voters who may be ineligible to vote, mostly felons or deceased. That problem has not been rectified, as an independent report out of Houston notes that up to 4,000 deceased individuals remain on Harris County voter rolls.
The election integrity crisis runs deeper: Non-citizens are registering and casting ballots in Texas. Public information requests submitted by the Texas Conservative Coalition Research Institute found at least 6,731 non-citizens have been removed from voter registration lists in the five most populous Texas counties. Many of them illegally voted before being removed from our voter rolls.
Absent an exhaustive state review, it remains unclear how many non-citizens may cast ballots this election year. What is clear, however, is that the state has failed to live up to its constitutional duty to reserve the right to vote to United States citizens. The Office of the Secretary of State, our chief election officer, admitted in 2006 that the citizenship of voters is never verified. Instead, voters check a box on their registration form and are taken at their word.
The link between registration and voting is obvious, but an important point bears repeating. When non-citizens, dead people, or otherwise unqualified individuals remain on the voter rolls, illegal votes will be cast, cancelling legitimate votes and denying legal voters of their civil rights.
Vote fraud can change the course of history. In 1948, Lyndon Johnson won a primary election for U.S. Senate by 87 votes, ultimately propelling him to the White House. That Senate primary, historians agree, was tainted by election fraud.
The election integrity measures we need are clear. First, the state must be a better of steward of our right to vote, beginning with smarter and more advanced registration and verification methods. Advanced technologies will assist in this endeavor, and legislators can look to the State of Arizona, the only state to verify citizenship, as a model. Guessing games and honor systems are antiquated and lead to fraud.
Second, the state must require all voters to present government-issued photo identification when voting. The United States Supreme Court affirmed the Constitutionality of Indiana's photo identification requirement, in part, as means to safeguard against fraud stemming from inflated or inaccurate, voter registration lists. Texas needs a photo identification requirement modeled after Indiana's.
Of course, these policies should be in place for this election. In the last session of the Texas Legislature, conservative legislators filed election integrity bills to achieve better voter registration lists (House Bill 2247 and Senate Bill 1464), smarter identification of voters at polling places (House Bill 218), and citizenship verification for those registering to vote (House Bill 626). Each bill passed at least one house of the Legislature only to be defeated in the other house.
Politicians frequently focus on differences in voters: Rural versus urban, black versus white versus Hispanic, rich versus poor, Republican versus Democrat. Yet the right to vote gives an equal voice to citizens from disparate social-economic, racial and regional groups.
Elections, and ultimately history, should be decided by the voters, not by narrow interests bent on stealing political power. Vote fraud must not be tolerated. Election integrity measures are a priority for the next Texas Legislature.
TAGS: 81st Texas Legislature, Ken Paxton, voter ID
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