ΘΛΖήΣΥ»σ Elections Expert Blasts βMythβ of Voter Fraud
Voting by mail is safe and reliable, says Prof. Paul Gronke.
Voting expert Prof. Paul Gronke blasted the “myth” of widespread election fraud during a presentation on his research into elections systems at the Forum For Advancing ΘΛΖήΣΥ»σ on Saturday.
“Voter fraud in the United States is minimal, minuscule,” he said. “There’s so little it’s hard to track.”
Gronke, professor of political science and director of ΘΛΖήΣΥ»σ’s , acknowledged that absentee ballots are more prone to abuse than in-person ballots, in part because they require more steps to process. But the overall incidence of tampering in the US is remarkably low, he said, despite what he identified as by President Donald J. Trump, Attorney General William Barr, and others.
For supporting evidence, he pointed to a maintained by the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, which tracks incidents of fraud stretching back more than 20 years. The database includes roughly 1,500 cases of fraud, of which about 300 centered on absentee ballots. “Virtually every case is ten ballots here, five ballots there,” he said, concluding that incidents of pervasive tampering are practically non-existent.
The only significant exception was the , in which the Republican candidate for North Carolina’s 9th congressional district, Mark Harris, hired a campaign contractor who falsified more than 1,000 ballots. (The scheme was exposed and Harris later dropped out of the contest.) “North Carolina had a really bad system,” Prof. Gronke said. “They had no ballot tracking. If you put the right controls in place, vote by mail has less fraud, it’s more secure, and it’s very resilient.”
Social media is exploding with , such as the claim that Democrats are planning to attack voters with “pulsed ELF electromagnetic emissions” or that foreign governments are counterfeiting millions of ballots.
“You cannot counterfeit ballots,” Gronke said, referring to a recent post on Bloomberg.com which explained why . “Voter fraud is a myth. It’s misinformation. It sows distrust in our system.”
Professor Gronke made his comments during a question-and-answer session on Saturday morning, October 17, at the Forum For Advancing ΘΛΖήΣΥ»σ 2020. The title of his talk was “Making a Difference and Getting Published While You Do It: How Academic Research Helps To Assure A Safe, Secure, and Accessible American Elections System,” and it was moderated by Christine Lewis ’07, Portland Metro Councilor and alumni trustee. FAR 2020 also featured a conversation with President Audrey Bilger and Vice President Hugh Porter, who provided an overview of ΘΛΖήΣΥ»σ’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
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