State rep debunks Trump voter fraud claims
October 25, 2016
The report Trump attributes to is a 2012 Pew Center study where it found approximately 24 million voter-registration records in the U.S. were inaccurate, 2.8 million people were registered in two or more states and 1.8 million registered voters were deceased.
When it comes to identifying what constitutes as voter fraud, Theresa Nielsen, deputy director of the Portage County Board of Elections, said voter fraud occurs “anytime a voter doesn’t vote their own ballot, falsify identification information or attempts to vote out of their county.”
Voter fraud should be identified, Nielsen said, and the individual committing fraud must knowingly be aware of their actions.
Nielsen said Trump’s comments discredit the work she and her staff put into assuring the ballots are legitimate.
“It does feel like it’s a personal attack because we take our jobs here very seriously,” she said. “We have multiple checks to ensure that the ballots aren’t compromised.”
Katie Moorman, president of the Kent State Political Science Club, also feels Trump’s statements of the election being rigged and imploring his supporters to monitor the polls is concerning.
“You’ve never had a candidate who pushed people to the polls to defend them,” she said. “Let’s say, for example, that some of … (Trump) supporters do get organized; I fear for states that have open carry laws, where I think that some intimidation could be go on.”
Moorman said it wouldn’t be conducive to what a free and fair election should be if individuals motivated by Trump’s statements show up at the polls out of fear of voter fraud.
“If someone who waits until Election Day to go to the polls and sees these people who are monitoring the polls can be intimidated,” Moorman said. “it could lead to them thinking that voting isn’t worth it.”
Angelo Angel is a senior reporter, contact him at [email protected].