Difference between revisions of "Voter fraud"

From Issuepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 12: Line 12:
 
===Usage===
 
===Usage===
 
The term is often used in a way that includes other types of [[electoral fraud]], but this is incorrect. [[Voter fraud]] is [[electoral fraud]] that is committed specifically through an attempted act of illegal voting – especially where that vote would give the voter more electoral representation than that to which they are entitled, which most often involves voting more than once.
 
The term is often used in a way that includes other types of [[electoral fraud]], but this is incorrect. [[Voter fraud]] is [[electoral fraud]] that is committed specifically through an attempted act of illegal voting – especially where that vote would give the voter more electoral representation than that to which they are entitled, which most often involves voting more than once.
==Notes==
+
==Instances==
* [[Election/2012/US/president/Jim Turner]]: someone who claims to support [[Barack Obama]] votes multiple times (different districts) in order to "save our country from the world envisioned by [[Mitt Romney]]". He later claimed to be joking.
+
* '''[[Crystal Mason]]''' filed a provisional ballot in the [[Election/2016/US|2016 election]], not realizing that she was ineligible to vote due to being on supervised release from prison for tax fraud. She is being vigorously prosecuted by [[US Republican Party|Republican]] officials who want to make political hay out of any apparent voter-fraud cases they can find.
 +
** '''2021-12-14''' ''The Atlantic'': [https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2022/01/voter-fraud-myth-election-lie/620846/ When the Myth of Voter Fraud Comes for You]
 +
* '''Jim Turner''', someone who claimed be a [[Barack Obama]] supporter, said on social media that he voted multiple times (different districts) [[Election/2012/US/president/Jim Turner|in the 2012 presidential election]] in order to "save our country from the world envisioned by [[Mitt Romney]]". He later claimed to be joking.
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
 
* {{wikipedia}} redirects to "electoral fraud", which covers other types of voting-related fraud as well, with emphasis on non-individual action
 
* {{wikipedia}} redirects to "electoral fraud", which covers other types of voting-related fraud as well, with emphasis on non-individual action

Revision as of 16:30, 15 December 2021

About

Voter fraud is when individual voters attempt to vote illegally in a way that might change the outcome of an election. It is extremely rare, and has never influenced the outcome of a major election. The Wall Street Journal defines it as "a term used to refer to cases in which one voter impersonates another at the poll to cast a fraudulent vote".

Despite this, conservoid politicians and propaganda outlets like to claim that it is rampant and wide-spread, as justification for draconian measures to restrict voting access and reduce voting among disempowered groups who are more likely to vote against them.

Of the few instances of actual voter fraud found, the overwhelming majority were committed by conservoids attempting to prove the existence of voter fraud.

Usage

The term is often used in a way that includes other types of electoral fraud, but this is incorrect. Voter fraud is electoral fraud that is committed specifically through an attempted act of illegal voting – especially where that vote would give the voter more electoral representation than that to which they are entitled, which most often involves voting more than once.

Instances

Links

  • Wikipedia redirects to "electoral fraud", which covers other types of voting-related fraud as well, with emphasis on non-individual action
  • ConservapediaConservapedia is an unreliable source. «is the crime of a voter submitting a ballot he or she is not entitled to cast.»: This actually seems accurate. «...it has been estimated at 2,000 cases in the 2000, 2004, and 2008 elections combined. However, it is difficult to gauge the exact number, and many cases may go undiscovered or unreported. It can change the outcome of a close election.»: This, however, does not, and it cites only a paywalled Wall Street Journal article which notes that researchers «say they have so far found little direct evidence that the practice is common enough to affect the results of elections, even close ones.»
  • RationalWiki «a moral panic weirdly popular in the United States. As genuine cases of voter fraud are almost non-existent, it is almost always a dog whistle term for people of color voting.» This.
  • SourceWatch «refers to attempts by either individual voters or voting-focused organizations to affect the outcome of an election by casting votes with fraudulent identities or misrepresenting eligibility to vote.» The "or voting-focused organizations" part of that is a different kind of electoral fraud. Voter fraud is by definition only committed by individuals casting illegal votes.


to file