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{{New unreviewed article|date=January 2017}}
{{New unreviewed article|date=January 2017}}
Accurate voter registration lists reduce election administration costs and prevent [[double voting]]. Two programs designed to assist with list maintenance, '''Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program'''<ref name="Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program"/> and Electronic Registration Information Center, are currently available to states within the [[United States of America]]. Crosscheck's primary objective is to identify potential duplicate registrations, with a secondary goal of identifying potential duplicate voters. The [[Electronic Registration Information Center]] (ERIC) has a mission of assisting states to improve the accuracy of America’s voter rolls and increase access to voter registration for all eligible citizens. All such programs are expected to conform to the federal [[National Voter Registration Act]] of 1993.<ref name="Voter List Accuracy"/><ref name="Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program"/>
Accurate voter registration lists reduce election administration costs and prevent double voting. Two programs designed to assist with list maintenance, '''Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program'''<ref name="Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program"/> and Electronic Registration Information Center, are currently available to states within the [[United States of America]]. Crosscheck's primary objective is to identify potential duplicate registrations, with a secondary goal of identifying potential duplicate voters. The [[Electronic Registration Information Center]] (ERIC) has a mission of assisting states to improve the accuracy of America’s voter rolls and increase access to voter registration for all eligible citizens. All such programs are expected to conform to the federal [[National Voter Registration Act]] of 1993.<ref name="Voter List Accuracy"/><ref name="Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program"/>


==Origins, Stated Purpose, and Expansion==
==Origins, Stated Purpose, and Expansion==
The Interstate Crosscheck Program was initiated in December 2005<ref name="Thornburgh signs four-state agreement">[http://www.kssos.org/forms/communication/canvassing_kansas/march06.pdf Thornburgh signs four-state agreement]</ref> at the Midwest Election Officials Conference (MEOC) by the office of the [[Kansas Secretary of State]] in coordination with Iowa, Missouri and Nebraska. The program combined each state's voter rolls into a database and sought to identify potential duplicate registrations by comparing first name, last name, and full date of birth. In 2006, the first crosscheck was conducted using voter registration records from Kansas, Iowa, Missouri, and Nebraska.
The Interstate Crosscheck Program was created in December 2005<ref name="Thornburgh signs four-state agreement">[http://www.kssos.org/forms/communication/canvassing_kansas/march06.pdf Thornburgh signs four-state agreement]</ref> at the Midwest Election Officials Conference (MEOC) by the office of the [[Kansas Secretary of State]] in coordination with Iowa, Missouri and Nebraska. The program combined each state's voter rolls into a database and sought to identify potential duplicate registrations by comparing first name, last name, and full date of birth. In 2006, the first crosscheck was conducted using voter registration records from Kansas, Iowa, Missouri, and Nebraska.


The program is administered by the office of the Kansas Secretary of State<ref name="Interstate Crosscheck Program Grows">[http://www.kssos.org/forms/communication/canvassing_kansas/dec13.pdf Interstate Crosscheck Program Grows]</ref> as a free service to all member states.
The program is administered by the office of the Kansas Secretary of State<ref name="Interstate Crosscheck Program Grows">[http://www.kssos.org/forms/communication/canvassing_kansas/dec13.pdf Interstate Crosscheck Program Grows]</ref> as a free service to all member states.


Under Secretary Kris Kobach, the program expanded rapidly from thirteen states in 2010 to a peak of 29 states in 2014. In 2017, Crosscheck analyzed 98 million voter registration records and returned 7.2 million "potential duplicate registrant" records to member states.
Under Secretary Kris Kobach, the program expanded rapidly from thirteen states in 2010 to a peak of 29 states in 2014. In 2017, Crosscheck analyzed 98 million voter registration records from 28 states and returned 7.2 million "potential duplicate registrant" records to member states.


==Inaccurate Results ==
==Inaccurate Results ==

Revision as of 16:44, 1 February 2018

Template:New unreviewed article Accurate voter registration lists reduce election administration costs and prevent double voting. Two programs designed to assist with list maintenance, Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program[1] and Electronic Registration Information Center, are currently available to states within the United States of America. Crosscheck's primary objective is to identify potential duplicate registrations, with a secondary goal of identifying potential duplicate voters. The Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC) has a mission of assisting states to improve the accuracy of America’s voter rolls and increase access to voter registration for all eligible citizens. All such programs are expected to conform to the federal National Voter Registration Act of 1993.[2][1]

Origins, Stated Purpose, and Expansion

The Interstate Crosscheck Program was created in December 2005[3] at the Midwest Election Officials Conference (MEOC) by the office of the Kansas Secretary of State in coordination with Iowa, Missouri and Nebraska. The program combined each state's voter rolls into a database and sought to identify potential duplicate registrations by comparing first name, last name, and full date of birth. In 2006, the first crosscheck was conducted using voter registration records from Kansas, Iowa, Missouri, and Nebraska.

The program is administered by the office of the Kansas Secretary of State[4] as a free service to all member states.

Under Secretary Kris Kobach, the program expanded rapidly from thirteen states in 2010 to a peak of 29 states in 2014. In 2017, Crosscheck analyzed 98 million voter registration records from 28 states and returned 7.2 million "potential duplicate registrant" records to member states.

Inaccurate Results

Crosscheck relies on only two points of data for matching: name and date of birth. Even when the last four digits of the social security number (SSN4) of the two records do not match, or when one or both SSN4 are missing, two voter registrations are considered "possible duplicates" if they match on first name, last name, and full date of birth. Matching based on first name, last name, and date of birth " fails for practically all common American names" according to ID Analytics analysis of a database of over 300 million unique records.

Crosscheck's use of loose matching standards lead to a high rate false positives: eligible voters who are unlikely to be double registered but who are identified as "potential duplicate registrants" by Crosscheck.

Although the high rate of false positives creates a myriad of issues, the Kansas Secretary of State's office does not publicly release the percentage of their widely publicized "potential duplicate registrants" which are false positives. Independent researchers point to public data from Virginia's 2013 Annual Report on List Maintenance which documents a 75% false positive rate.

For voters and member states, misidentification can be costly. Each voter misidentified faces incremental privacy risk when their personally identifying information is sent to at least one state beyond his or her state of residence, and risks of being inactivated or removed from voter rolls. In Ada County, Idaho, election officials relied on Crosscheck's list of "potential duplicate registrants" to remove 765 voters. None were duplicate registrants.

States must invest in extensive processing to vet each Crosscheck record in an attempt to avoid an inappropriate deletion of false positives like those that occurred in Ada County. No state has publicly documented the administrative cost involved in this process but Virginia's 2015 Annual List Maintenance Report states "the Crosscheck program does not have a direct fee associated with it, however, the initial data received from Crosscheck requires significant agency handling to determine what data is usable and what data is not usable. Crosscheck data is prone to false positives since the initial matching is only conducted using first name, last name, and date of birth. The need to greatly refine and analyze Crosscheck data has required significant ELECT staff resources that are not accounted for when proponents claim the program is “free.” "[5]

Nevada and Georgia report that they submit data to Crosscheck each year but never use the results for list maintenance. To date, eight states have withdrawn from the free program citing that the benefits are not worth the effort involved. (citations)

Discrimination Controversy

The loose matching standards used to identify "potential duplicate registrants" by the Kansas Secretary of State also raises significant concerns about the opportunity for racial bias in list maintenance. According to "Health of State Democracies", "50 percent of Communities of Color share a common surname, while only 30 percent of white people do," so that in the program's flagged lists, "white voters are underrepresented by 8 percent, African Americans are overrepresented by 45 percent; Hispanic voters are overrepresented by 24 percent; and Asian voters are overrepresented by 31 percent".[6]

After examining "potential duplicate registrant" lists from some of the participating states, investigative reporter Greg Palast claimed the Crosscheck system "disproportionately threatens solid Democratic constituencies: young, black, Hispanic and Asian-American voters" with the intention of securing Republican victories. Palast concluded this was achieved by eliminating discrete individuals based on nothing more than similarity of name, a method with a "built-in racial bias" that especially eliminated voters from targeted minorities with a more limited pool of given names, for example, Hispanic voters named Jose Garcia.[7]

Presence on the "potential duplicate registrant" list does not mean a voter was removed from the rolls.

The decentralized and private nature of voting records makes detection of a "purge" based on race, name, or party affiliation difficult to detect. Luckily, this same decentralization would make widespread "purges" difficult to coordinate as action is taken on Crosscheck's results in local jurisdictions (typically at county level). A widespread effort to purge would require dozens or hundreds of local election officials to risk felony convictions.

Data Security and Data Handling Lapses

Articles in ProPublica and Gizmodo, relying on information provided by activists in Illinois and Kansas, revealed in fall 2017 that the Kansas-managed database holding nearly 100 million records of private voter data were protected by security protocols so flawed they could be "hacked by a novice".

Double Voting as a Rationale for Crosscheck

Interstate Crosscheck is part of a larger, ongoing controversy over whether or not such voter registration programs are a valid means of protecting against fraud. Crosscheck is the only program that can detect, after the fact, potential "double voters". It has limited ability to prevent double voting or does not detect any other type of individual voter fraud.

Despite over seven million "potential double registrants" being "flagged" by the Crosscheck program in 2014, less than four people were charged with voting more than once, and not a single flagging led to a conviction, casting doubt on the system's usefulness.[6][8]

References

  1. ^ a b Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program, National Association of State Election Directors, 26 January 2013
  2. ^ Voter List Accuracy, National Conference of State Legislatures, 16 June 2016
  3. ^ Thornburgh signs four-state agreement
  4. ^ Interstate Crosscheck Program Grows
  5. ^ "Virginia Annual List Maintenance Report" (PDF). {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  6. ^ a b Participation in the Interstate Crosscheck System, Center for American Progress Action Fund
  7. ^ The GOP's Stealth War Against Voters, Rolling Stone, 24 August 2016
  8. ^ Controversial anti-voter fraud program risks disenfranchising voters through racial bias, report finds, 2 September 2016
  • Bryant B. "Interstate Voter Registration Crosscheck Program". National Association of State Election Directors. 26 January 2013. [1]
  • Bryant, B.; Curtis, K. (eds.) "Interstate Crosscheck Program Grows". Canvassin Kansas. December 2013. [2]
  • Harmon, L.; Posner, C.; Jawando, M.; Dhaiti, M. "Participation in the Interstate Crosscheck System." The Health of State Democracies. July 2015. [3]
  • Mahoney, E; Davis, H.;and Miller, J. "America Scrubs Millions from the Voter Rolls. Is It Fair?" The Center for Public Integrity. 22 August 2016. [4]
  • Palast, G. "The GOP's Stealth War Against Voters." Rolling Stone. 24 August 2016. [5]
  • Sturgis, S. "Controversial Anti-Voter Fraud Program Risks Disenfranchising Voters Through Racial Bias, Report Finds". Facing South: A Voice for the Changing South. 2 September 2016. [6]
  • "United States Student Foundation v. Land - Order. ACLU. 29 Jan 2009. [7]
  • "Voter List Accuracy". National Conference of State Legislature. 16 June 2016. [8]