In the wake of Shelby County v. Holder and the January 6 Capitol insurrection, changes to election laws, policies, and especially access to voting have become a key political battleground. A central point of contention is whether new restrictive voting laws intentionally discriminate against Black and Hispanic subpopulations in the United States. Conversely, do policies that expand voting access favor Democrats and increase the possibility of election fraud?
In The Cost of Voting in the American States, Michael J. Pomante II, Scot Schraufnagel, and Quan Li test these questions. The authors look specifically for systematic outcomes produced by distinctive election policies in the American states. First, they establish a competent measure of voting restrictions to begin this unraveling. The authors create a Cost of Voting Index (COVI) for the fifty states, which uses a statistical procedure to extract an underlying dimension and to determine significance from state laws based on how restrictive the polices are. The authors call the underlying dimension extracted the “cost of voting.” With this measure in place, they evaluate which states have a higher cost of voting, how this cost impacts who votes, and whether there is a correlation between the cost of voting and minority populations.
Using Racial Threat Theory arguments, the authors demonstrate that states with larger or growing Black and Hispanic populations have more restricted voting, and that these restrictive voting laws disproportionately demobilize these populations in predictable ways. States with a higher cost of voting also show lower minority electoral success as well as a larger gap in Black and female representation, and the authors reveal that decreasing the cost of voting does not lead to fraud or favor one party over another. The Cost of Voting in the American States makes a case for a new preclearance formula, and the COVI provides a viable approach for future election law.
विषयसूची
Introduction
1. A Brief History of Voting Restrictions in the United States
2. The Changing Nature of State Election Law
3. Falling Behind or Jumping Ahead: Movement in the State Cost of Voting Rank
4. Minority Populations, Republicans, and the COVI
5. The COVI and Reported Voter Turnout
6. Minority Candidate Electoral Success and the Underrepresentation of Minorities and Women
7. the First Big Lie: Accessible Voting Leads to Widespread Voter Fraud
8. The Second Big Lie: More Convenient Voting Helps Democrats
Conclusion
Appendices
A: Measurement Challenges and Omitted Variables
B: More Specifics on Constructing the Cost of Voting Index
C: Sensitivity Analysis
D: Construct Validity Check, the COVI, and State Voter Turnout
E: 4 Tables
F: State COVI Values by Presidential Election
G: 5 Tables
Notes
Works Cited
Index
लेखक के बारे में
Michael J. Pomante II* is a research associate at States United Democracy Center.Scot Schraufnagel is professor of political science at Northern Illinois University.Quan Li* is a data scientist at Catalist.*Michael J. Pomante II and Quan Li complete their work on this research before transitioning to their new positions. The views in the book do not necessarily reflect the views of their employers.