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In the months leading up to the 2020 U.S. presidential election, U.S. President Donald Trump repeatedly claimed that mail-in voting, a method of voting that became increasingly popular and necessary due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic, would lead to widespread voter fraud. Trump made these claims despite the fact that the United States has been voting by mail since the Civil War in the 1860s; that Trump himself has cast mail-in ballots in several elections; and that relatively few criminal convictions related to absentee-ballot fraud are documented, especially when compared to the overall number of votes cast. On July 30, 2020, actress Mia Farrow brought attention to the latter point in a tweet claiming the U.S. had only 143 cases of absentee-ballot fraud over the last 20 years: This claim is largely accurate. Farrow referred to a database of voter-fraud cases compiled by the the Heritage Foundation, an American conservative think tank based in Washington, D.C., that appears to have notable influence on the Trump administration's policies. This database catalogs various types of election fraud, such as altering vote counts, buying votes, and duplicate voting — adding up to a total of 1,290 proven instances of voter fraud (in more than 30 years), according to the site's own summary. Farrow's tweet focused on just one category in the database: instances of fraudulent use of absentee ballots. This database does not have separate categories for mail-in votes and absentee votes. Some have argued that these are two distinct methods of voting, but no practical difference exists between these two terms. It should also be noted that while some have turned voter fraud into a partisan issue, the Heritage Foundation's database includes fraudulent attempts that would have benefited candidates from any party. Farrow's claim that the U.S. had 143 criminal convictions for fraudulent use of absentee ballots over the last 20 years is generally accurate. However, when we perused the database, we only found 136 listings under this category during this time frame. The discrepancy is likely due to entries being added or deleted from this database since it was originally published. As of this writing, the Heritage Foundation lists 145 criminal convictions for absentee-ballot fraud dating back 32 years to 1988. While the White House has used this database to show that that absentee-ballot fraud has truly occurred, others have used the statistics to argue that this problem is not at all widespread. Ellen Weintraub, the commissioner of the Federal Election Commission (FEC), highlighted this statistic in a 66-tweet thread about Trump's misleading claims on voter fraud: While the Heritage Foundation has documented approximately 140 criminal convictions of absentee-ballot fraud over the last 20 years, calculating this as a percentage of the total number of ballots cast is difficult for a number of reasons. For starters, the Heritage Foundation's list is not exhaustive. The foundation writes: Although this database may not include every conviction for voter fraud, it does use a misleadingly large sample set in one way: The numbers are often used to argue about the prevalence of voter fraud in a presidential race, but the vast majority of examples in this category are not about presidential-election fraud but are related to local and state elections, such as races for school board officials and local city council positions. We looked over the database for listings related to the two main presidential candidates over the last 20 years (George W. Bush v. Al Gore in 2000; George W. Bush v. John Kerry in 2004; Barack Obama v. John McCain in 2008; Barack Obama v. Mitt Romney in 2012; and Donald Trump versus Hillary Clinton in 2016), and we found only four listed criminal convictions related to absentee-ballot fraud. One instance involved a person voting for the Democratic candidate (Kerry in 2004), while the other three involved people voting for the Republican presidential candidate (Romney in 2012 and Trump twice in 2016). Here are the Heritage Foundation's listings related to presidential elections (emphasis ours): As illustrated in the examples above, these listings also vary in severity. All of the aforementioned listings involve a single extra ballot, but the database does include more serious examples, such as persons who attempted to pass off fraudulent signatures. Given that this database is not exhaustive, includes examples involving single fraudulent ballots and multiple fraudulent ballots, and includes not just presidential elections but any local or state election, it's practically impossible to calculate the percentage of votes represented by fraudulent ballots. Anyway you count it, however, the .0006% cited by Farrow overstates the commonality of voter fraud. First off, Farrow appears to have misplaced a decimal. Weintraub's tweet states .00006% (not .0006%), which appears to have been culled from an article published in The Hill: But even that number may be too high. If approximately 120 million people vote for president every year (as they did in 2016), that adds up to about 600 million votes for president in the last 20 years. The primary elections receive about half as many votes, so we can add another 300 million votes to this total. We don't have data for the number of votes cast in local city and state elections, so let's add another 100 million votes for argument's sake (the actual number is likely much higher if we accounted for every election in every city in every state over the last 20 years) for a total of 1 billion votes. This is a conservative estimate that does not include, for example, votes cast for a third party candidate. The total number of votes cast in local, state, and national elections over the last 20 years likely exceeds 1 billion. With just roughly 140 convictions of absentee-ballot voter fraud during this time frame, then, that number represents approximately 0.000014% of total votes cast. Lastly, it should be noted that the aforementioned statistics relate to criminal convictions. In other words, this database highlights the success of the safeguards that were put in place to stop fraudulent mail-in voter attempts.
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