OLYMPIA, Wash. -- Some 24 million voter registrations in the
United States contain significant errors, including about 1.8
million dead people still on the rolls and many more approved to
vote in multiple states, according to a report released
Tuesday.
Even though the inaccuracies impact one in eight registrations,
researches at the Pew Center on the States said they don't see it
as an indicator of widespread fraud. Rather, they believe outdated
systems are failing to keep pace with the most basic changes in
people's lives, feeding perceptions that U.S. elections are not as
airtight as they could be.
In conjunction with Pew's report, eight states said they are
working this year on a centralized data system to help identify
people whose registrations may be out of date.
"A lot of people probably assume we do this already," said Sam
Reed, who oversees elections as Washington's secretary of state. "I
think it's going to bring more trust and confidence in the election
system."
About 2.7 million people have active registrations in multiple
states, including about 2,000 people registered in four or more
states, according to the Pew report. Elections officials said it is
difficult to track when someone has moved to another state without
canceling their previous registration.
Some 1.8 million deceased people are still listed as active
voters, according to the study, which is based on a computer
analysis of a proprietary voter database used by Democrats.
Researchers believe 12.7 million records do not reflect the current
addresses of active voters while 12 million contain address
inaccuracies, including those that make it unlikely that mail could
reach them.
Some of the files contain multiple problems, with Pew estimating
that a total of 24 million have problems.
The numbers are at least partially supported by anecdotal
evidence. For example, Washington state and Alaska – one of the
nation's least populous states – compared each other's voter
registration systems last year and found an estimated 4,500
duplicates.
The eight states involved in the centralization project are
Colorado, Delaware, Maryland, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Virginia and
Washington.
Pew believes the centralized system and online voter
registrations will help save money by eliminating the need to print
millions of forms, enter data by hand or send mail to outdated or
incorrect addresses.
"That's a tremendous cost to the taxpayers," said David Becker,
director of Election Initiatives at the Pew Center on the States.
The centralized system has not settled on participation fees yet
but is expected to be in the tens of thousands of dollars per state
per year.
The Brennan Center for Justice, which has been working on voter
registration issues, is also pushing for a modernization of the
system but cautions that states need to take particular care to not
rush to eliminate voters from their rolls. Lawrence Norden, an
attorney at the center, said there have been a number of cases in
recent years where people have been improperly removed from the
system based on an incomplete match – for example, two people who
have the same name and birthdate.
"This is something that has to be done very carefully," he
said.
Some states have adopted laws in the last couple years to
require photo IDs to vote – hoping it would prevent fraud even
though examples of such cheating are rare. That tactic was one the
Brennan Center is directly opposing.
Linda Lamone, the administrator of elections in Maryland, said
the Pew work has already pushed the state toward online voter
registration, which will also allow voters to update their
information electronically. Maryland has also changed its system so
that voters who choose to register while getting a driver's license
must complete the process there. Previously, voters had to
separately file paperwork and the state ended up having conflicting
information about registrants.
Lamone said dead people who are registered in the state but end
up dying in another state that does not actively share death
information can leave deceased voters on the rolls. She said the
centralized system will help ease those administrative
challenges.
"We're going to get better information on voters," she said.
"Overall, it's going to result in much more accurate voter
registration lists."