| I don't care about dog whistles. I do care that many Republicans have gone to great lengths to prevent black people from voting. That they have dressed up their racist disenfranchisement efforts with concerns about nonexistent problems impresses me not at all. https://theintercept.com/2020/05/28/pennsylvania-voter-rolls... https://www.aclu.org/news/civil-liberties/block-the-vote-vot... Of course Democrats are also implicated in another source of disenfranchisement, inadequate facilities provisioning and maintenance. Even on that topic, Republicans are more to blame in e.g. Wisconsin. https://www.npr.org/2020/04/07/829091968/long-lines-reported... https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2020/... https://apnews.com/eb8c216987916586cf0b5f68c38871fa https://www.npr.org/2020/06/09/873054620/long-lines-voting-m... https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-03-03/californ... |
It's also doesn't seem reasonable to characterize asking for ineligible voters to be removed from the rolls as voter suppression. There is a consistent narrative that voter fraud doesn't happen, as if that's a result of nobody having any incentive to do it instead of a result of groups constantly fighting against it, as though we could just stop taking any measures to try to prevent it and there still wouldn't be any.
If a demand to remove ineligible voters is also removing eligible voters then the problem is the people processing the request removing eligible voters, not the people making the request to remove ineligible voters.
They're also being incredibly disingenuous in claiming that proposed measures to detect voter fraud are unneeded because we haven't detected much voter fraud -- as if you can justify not replacing a bad smoke detector because it isn't detecting smoke.