On the Radar
Politicians at all levels of government have repeatedly claimed, with no evidence, that the 2016 and 2018 elections were affected by millions of people voting illegally. The integrity of the 2020 election has also been attacked by baseless accusations about a “rigged” election and widespread voter fraud.
The truth: Voter fraud and election fraud are relatively rare.
The Heritage Foundation has compiled a database that catalogs 1,259 instances of proven fraud dating back to 1982, although the database is not comprehensive or exhaustive.
Since that time, there have been hundreds of millions of votes cast in elections at all levels of government--instances of fraud perpetrated by voters, candidates, campaigns, and election officials represent a very small proportion of the electorate.
This is also true in the case of mail-in ballots, which are especially important this year as many states expanded no-excuse mail-in voting in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. But states have a variety of systems in place to combat theft, forgery, and fraud.
Read up on the facts and fictions of voter fraud here, then join the conversation:
Are you concerned about voter fraud?
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