About two years ago I did something foolish: I wrote an optimistic column arguing that a polarizing issue was ripe for de-escalation and compromise.
The issue was voting rights, where Republicans have long championed voter ID laws as a bulwark against alleged voting fraud, while Democrats have countered that such restrictions unfairly burden many Americans, racial minorities especially, in the exercise of their hard-won right to vote.
The good news, I said back then, was that lots of studies suggest that voter ID laws don't do either thing. They don't prevent much (or any) fraud, but they also don't have much (if any) effect on turnout, for minorities or any other group. So conservatives could stop pushing them, liberals could stop freaking out about them, and without either side losing anything substantial, compromise and conciliation could rule the day.
Naturally, since then the voting wars have only burned hotter, thanks to the exigencies of the coronavirus era and the arson of former President Donald Trump. The virus prompted a vast expansion of mail-in voting in the name of public health, Trump blamed vote-by-mail fraud (among other conspiracies) for his defeat, and soon a large swath of conservatives became convinced corrupt balloting had stolen the election.
Now Republicans all over the country are advancing bills that impose new ID requirements and new limits on absentee and early votes, while Democrats are advancing a national bill that would essentially federalize election law and make certain Republican restrictions impermissible. And each side is talking like this is an existential fight, with the very concept of a fair democratic election hanging in the balance.
But the facts continue to suggest otherwise, with two new studies adding to the case for compromise.
The first study, from the Democracy and Polarization Lab at Stanford University, looks at the effects of "no-excuse absentee voting" on the 2020 election — the kind of balloting that a lot of states expanded and that many Republican state legislators now want to roll back.
Contrary to liberal expectations, easing the voting rules this way seemed to have no effect on turnout: "States newly implementing no-excuse absentee voting for 2020 did not see larger increases in turnout than states that did not," says the Stanford study.