Reading Notes Assignment

analytical paper

essay
MLA

Don't use plagiarized sources. Get Your Custom Essay on
Reading Notes Assignment
Just from $13/Page
Order Essay

Universityof Massachusetts Boston

  • ScholarWorks at UMass Boston
  • Sociology Faculty Publication Series Sociology

    12-2013

    Jim Crow 2.0?: W hy States Consider and Adopt
    Restrictive Voter Access Policies
    Keith Gunnar Bentele

  • University of Massachusetts Boston
  • , keith.bentele@umb.edu

    Erin E. O’Brien
    University of Massachusetts Boston, erin.obrien@umb.edu

    Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.umb.edu/sociology_faculty_pubs

    Part of the American Politics Commons, Politics and Social Change Commons, and the Race and
    Ethnicity Commons

    This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Sociology at ScholarWorks at UMass Boston. It has been accepted for inclusion in
    Sociology Faculty Publication Series by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at UMass Boston. For more information, please contact
    library.uasc@umb.edu.

    Recommended Citation
    Bentele, Keith Gunnar and O’Brien, Erin E., “

  • Jim Crow 2.0?: Why States Consider and Adopt Restrictive Voter Access Policies

  • (2013). Sociology Faculty Publication Series. Paper 11.
    http://scholarworks.umb.edu/sociology_faculty_pubs/11

    http://scholarworks.umb.edu?utm_source=scholarworks.umb.edu%2Fsociology_faculty_pubs%2F11&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages

    http://scholarworks.umb.edu/sociology_faculty_pubs?utm_source=scholarworks.umb.edu%2Fsociology_faculty_pubs%2F11&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages

    http://scholarworks.umb.edu/sociology?utm_source=scholarworks.umb.edu%2Fsociology_faculty_pubs%2F11&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages

    http://scholarworks.umb.edu/sociology_faculty_pubs?utm_source=scholarworks.umb.edu%2Fsociology_faculty_pubs%2F11&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages

    http://network.bepress.com/hgg/discipline/387?utm_source=scholarworks.umb.edu%2Fsociology_faculty_pubs%2F11&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages

    http://network.bepress.com/hgg/discipline/425?utm_source=scholarworks.umb.edu%2Fsociology_faculty_pubs%2F11&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages

    http://network.bepress.com/hgg/discipline/426?utm_source=scholarworks.umb.edu%2Fsociology_faculty_pubs%2F11&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages

    http://network.bepress.com/hgg/discipline/426?utm_source=scholarworks.umb.edu%2Fsociology_faculty_pubs%2F11&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages

    http://scholarworks.umb.edu/sociology_faculty_pubs/11?utm_source=scholarworks.umb.edu%2Fsociology_faculty_pubs%2F11&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages

    mailto:library.uasc@umb.edu

    Jim Crow 2.0?:

    Why States Consider and Adopt Restrictive Voter Access Polices

    Forthcoming at Perspectives on Politics. Please do not cite or distribute without

    permission of corresponding author.

    Keith Bentele, PhD*

    Assistant Professor of Sociology

    University of Massachusetts Boston

    e-mail: keith.bentele@umb.edu

    phone: 617.287.405

    6

    Erin O’Brien, PhD

    Associate Professor of Political Science

    University of Massachusetts Boston

    e-mail: erin.obrien@umb.edu

    phone: 216.262.677

    2

    *Corresponding Author

    We appreciate the valuable feedback we received from Joe Soss, David Kaib, Ian

    Vandewalker, and our anonymous reviewers at Perspectives on Politics. We also thank

    Amanda Colligan, Amanda Aykanian and Marija Bingulac for their excellent research

    assistance. Leila Farsakh, Luis Jimenez, and Zhang Wu provided very helpful, and much

    appreciated, guidance into an unfamiliar literature. We also owe a special debt of gratitude

    to Jeffrey Isaac for his exceptional guidance and support throughout.

    1

    Abstract

    In recent years there has been a dramatic increase in state legislation likely to reduce

    access for some voters, including photo identification and proof of citizenship

    requirements, registration restrictions, absentee ballot voting restrictions, and reductions

    in early voting. Political operatives often ascribe malicious motives when their opponents

    either endorse or oppose such

    legislation.

    In an effort to bring empirical clarity and

    epistemological standards to what has been a deeply charged, partisan and frequently

    anecdotal debate, this paper uses multiple specialized regression approaches to examine

    factors associated with both the proposal and adoption of restrictive voter access

    legislation from 2006-11. Our results indicate that proposal and passage are highly

    partisan, strategic, and racialized affairs. These findings are consistent with a scenario in

    which the targeted demobilization of minority voters and African Americans is a central

    driver of recent legislative developments. We discuss the implications of these results for

    current partisan and legal debates regarding voter restrictions and our understanding of the

    conditions incentivizing modern suppression efforts. Further, we situate these policies

    within developments in social welfare and criminal justice policy that collectively reduce

    electoral access among the socially marginalized.

    2

    In The Right to Vote: The Contested History of Democracy in the United States

    Alexander Keyssar notes that: “History rarely moves in simple, straight lines, and the

    history of suffrage is no exception.”
    i
    The trajectory of voting rights and electoral access in

    the U.S. is rightly seen as a story of the progressive extension of the franchise. However,

    often obscured by such broad narratives is the reality that electoral reforms have worked

    to both expand and restrict the franchise for particular categories of voters over time.
    ii

    Exclusionary reforms are nearly universally enacted for partisan advantage, a temptation

    enabled by state responsibility for the administration and regulation of elections.
    iii

    The

    struggle to shape access to the vote has intensified once again as the volume of legislation

    impacting electoral access has increased in recent years. In this article we focus on the

    increasing proposal and passage of state laws that place new restrictions on various

    aspects of both the voter registration process and the opportunity to actually cast a ballot.

    Required photo identification or proof of citizenship to vote, more stringently regulation

    of groups or individuals who aim to register new voters, shortened early voting periods,

    repeal of same-day voter registration, and increased restrictions on voting by felons

    exemplify the different types of policies that have been proposed and adopted in various

    states since the mid-2000s
    iv

    . Figure 1 illustrates the rise in the volume of proposed

    restrictive changes since 2006 and the dramatic increase in restrictive legislation that

    actually passed in 2011. These policies stand in sharp contrast to trends in the late 1990s

    and early 2000s where many states expanded voting by mail and early voting—usually

    under the assumption that these policies would increase voter participation.
    v

    [Figure 1 goes about here]

    Figure 2 illustrates which states have been the most active in proposing restrictive

    voter access policies. The geographic distribution of this activity is widespread and does

    not concentrate overwhelmingly in battleground states or any particular region. And while

    more restrictions were proposed in the South due to a couple of particularly active states,

    Southern states vary significantly in their rates of proposal. In short, the regional

    distribution of proposed bills makes clear that restrictive voter access legislation was

    3

    proposed with frequency nationwide from 2006 to 2011, but provides us little insight into

    why.

    [Figure 2 goes about here]

    Figure 3 presents the number of restrictive legislative changes that were actually passed

    by state legislatures between 2006-11. Consistent with the policy process
    vi

    , restrictive

    voter access policies are passed at rates far lower than they are proposed. And in contrast

    to legislative proposals, the geographic distribution of passed legislation is more

    suggestive of the conditions driving policy adoption in this arena. It is clearly the case that

    legislation passed more frequently in the South and in battleground states like Ohio and

    Florida.

    Collectively, these figures show that the proposal of restrictive voter access

    legislation occurred in nearly every state between 2006-11 and that at least one restrictive

    change passed in half of all states. Policy diffusion at such a significant rate and reach is

    significant given the complexities and peculiarities of state-level policy making.
    vii

    The

    popular press has taken note of these activities surrounding restrictive voter access

    policies, but the explanations provided for such developments rely nearly exclusively on

    partisan accounts.
    viii

    In what follows, we provide a comprehensive analysis of these

    legislative developments by examining the state-level partisan, electoral, demographic,

    and racial factors most strongly associated with more frequent proposal and passage of

    these voter restrictions within states. We draw upon both current political discourse and

    social science research for explanations as to why states have been more likely to consider

    and adopt these new restrictions and offer each to empirical test. With findings from

    sound social science as our vehicle, our analysis moves well beyond the trading of

    partisan barbs and allows us to demonstrate the deficiencies in these conventional takes

    for understanding recent legislative developments.

    Beyond the partisan debate, our research offers an enrichment of theoretical

    conversations concerning the roles played by political parties in American democracy,

    voter suppression, race and policymaking, and even the broader literature on

    democratization. For example, the classical view that political parties enhance democratic

    4

    incorporation under tight election margins is not borne out by the recent history of US

    politics. Rather, we argue that the Republican Party has engaged in strategic

    demobilization efforts in response to changing demographics, shifting electoral fortunes,

    and an internal rightward ideological drift among the party faithful. Far from historically

    unique, we situate the most recent round of electoral reforms among other measures

    trumpeted as protecting electoral legitimacy while intended to exclude the marginalized

    for a particular political party’s advantage. In doing so, our research bolsters and adds

    contemporary nuance to our understanding of the political conditions that incentivize

    parties to engage in voter suppression.

    Our finding that legislative developments in this policy area remain heavily shaped

    by racial considerations is strongly resonant with the historical relationships between

    race, voter restrictions and federalism often viewed as hallmarks of American political

    development.
    ix

    Further, we suggest that useful conceptual links may be drawn between

    contemporary voter restrictions and recent developments in criminal justice and social

    welfare policy. In all three of these policy areas racial threat and myths are particularly

    salient, and the character of state-level legislation is particularly responsive to the racial

    composition of states. As modern poverty governance and criminal justice policies are

    increasingly understood through an analytic frame that emphasizes discriminatory and

    disempowering impacts
    x
    , we view restrictive voter access legislation as an additional

    layer of barriers reducing electoral access for minority and lower income voters. While

    we focus on voter restrictions below, we highlight a broader suite of exclusionary policy

    developments occurring across multiple policy arenas that have produced significant, and

    increasing, variation in state-level access to the vote.

    Theoretical links to the larger democratization literature are also in play here.

    Upon first blush, connections between our findings and this literature may seem a stretch

    because of the stability of U.S. democracy and absence of authoritarian traditions or

    contexts.
    xi

    The processes that result from contemporary democratic transitions certainly

    differ in magnitude from those involved in recent changes to American electoral policies.

    Nonetheless, we find it striking that our findings expose elements of American

    electioneering reminiscent of how actors in competitive authoritarian regimes manipulate

    election practices so that voters are drawn almost exclusively from their own

    5

    supporters.
    xii

    We thus compliment the work of Desmond King and colleagues by showing

    how one advanced democracy, the U.S., is actually changing voting procedures in a

    racialized and restraining fashion in the modern era – “de-democratization” along racial

    lines.
    xiii

    That this is true for the American case reinforces the incompleteness of most

    American narratives regarding citizenship and political development. Deeply racialized,

    exclusionary ideologies and corresponding practices have always accompanied the more

    readily acknowledged reality of liberal incorporation.
    xiv

    We find the exclusionary

    American tradition well represented today,
    xv

    a tendency bolstered, yet again, by the

    power and flexibility federalism grants to the states. Last, for advocates of electoral

    reform the developments examined here provide a cautionary reminder of the seemingly

    endless variation and creativity evidenced in efforts to repurposed electoral reforms and

    institutions to exclude voters and shape electoral outcomes.

    [Figure 3 goes about here]

    Partisan and Academic Perspectives

    Those on the political left and political right have not been reticent to proffer

    accounts, or level accusations, for why restrictive voter access legislation has been

    proposed and adopted. On the left these policies are typically vilified as thinly veiled

    attempts by Republicans to depress turnout among constituencies deemed favorable to the

    Democratic Party: minorities, new immigrants, the elderly, disabled, and young.
    xvi

    Ari

    Berman summarizes this view well in reference to the 2012 presidential election:

    Republican officials have launched an unprecedented, centrally coordinated

    campaign to suppress the elements of the Democratic vote that elected Barack

    Obama in 2008. Just as Dixiecrats once used poll taxes and literacy tests to bar

    black Southerners from voting, a new crop of GOP governors and state legislators

    has passed a series of seemingly disconnected measures that could prevent

    millions of students, minorities, immigrants, ex-convicts and the elderly from

    casting ballots.
    xvii

    Left-leaning media echo this line of reasoning, as do prominent interest groups like the

    American Association of Retired People (AARP) and the National Association for the

    Advancement of Colored People.
    xviii

    Such perceptions are only reinforced by instances

    such as that of a Pennsylvania Republican state house majority leader who infamously

    stated that the passage of the state’s 2012 voter identification law would “allow Governor

    Romney to win the state of Pennsylvania.”
    xix

    6

    The Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Constitutional, Civil Rights and Human

    Rights, led by Democrats, held hearings on restrictive legislation under the title “New

    State Voting Laws: Barriers to the Ballot?”.
    xx

    The Congressional Black Caucus,

    Congressional Hispanic Caucus, and Congressional Asian Pacific American

    Caucus joined forces in federal testimony and activism against the voter access policies’

    alleged discriminatory intent.
    xxi

    The Department of Justice under the Obama

    Administration, citing Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, worked to nullify or stay voter

    access legislation in Florida, Texas, and South Carolina arguing that the legislation would

    “deny or abridge…. the right to vote on the basis of race, color, or membership in a

    language minority group”.
    xxii

    It is clear that for Democrats, restrictive voter access

    policies are viewed as purposive efforts by Republicans to depress turnout amongst their

    core constituents.

    Meanwhile, many Republican politicians and their allies assert that restrictive

    voter access legislation is intended to prevent or curtail rampant electoral fraud so as to

    preserve the legitimacy and integrity of the electoral process.
    xxiii

    Such discussions often

    emphasize the possibilities or invitation for fraud in voting rolls that include deceased

    individuals, “fraud friendly” registration laws like the Motor Voter Bill, and absentee

    ballots as a “tool of choice” for those attempting voter fraud.
    xxiv

    Further, some accuse

    Democrats of committing electoral high jinks with more frequency because their core

    constituents are more likely to commit fraud due to their economic insecurity.
    xxv

    As Larry

    Sabato and Glenn Simpson explain the right’s logic, “Republican base voters are middle-

    class and not easily induced to commit fraud, while ‘the pools of people who appear to be

    available and more vulnerable to an invitation to participate in vote fraud tend to lean

    Democratic… …a poor person has more incentive to sell his vote than an upper class

    suburbanite’.”
    xxvi

    From this perspective, Democrats who oppose voter access regulations

    are working to continue their unfair and fraudulent advantages at the ballot box at the

    expense of democratic legitimacy. Kenneth Blackwell, former Attorney General of Ohio

    and current Republican operative, conveyed this while speaking on voter identification

    proposals:

    What more than 30 states have tried to do is put in place a common-sense measure

    of voter ID so that people are assured that voters are who they purport to be, and

    7

    voter IDs are commonplace in our culture. You need [an ID] for a driver’s license,

    for boarding an airplane, receiving a passport, purchasing alcohol or checking out

    a library book. So to use it to safeguard the integrity of the voting process at the

    voting station is pretty noneventful. … We all know the horror stories of ACORN

    in 2008 and 2010. So there is enough evidence to suggest that we need to put

    things in place to protect this from going crazy. This is a reasonable safeguard to

    protect against voter fraud and ballot box stuffing when we have sufficient enough

    evidence that there are some people who would do just that if given the

    opportunity.
    xxvii

    Right-leaning prestige media and blogs add further heat to this line of argument by

    pushing back on the ascription of racial motivations by many on the left. As the National

    Review’s Dennis Prager penned in 2011, and Fund and von Spakovsky similarly

    referenced in 2012, “it is hard to imagine a more demeaning statement about black

    America than labeling demands that all voters show a photo ID anti-black”.

    Rhetorically then partisans on both the right and left provide distinct explanations

    for the recent increase in restrictive voter access legislation.
    xxviii1

    On the right, they are a

    necessary response to rampant electoral fraud perpetrated by Democrats and allied

    organizations. On the left, restrictive access legislation is seen as a strategic attempt to

    reduce turnout amongst Democratic-leaning voters. Thankfully, there is a large body of

    academic research that allows us to operationalize and empirically examine both these

    claims while situating current developments within the larger context of American

    electioneering, extending the franchise, and voter suppression.

    Many who view recent restrictive efforts as attempts at voter suppression often

    draw parallels to the long history of suppression and demobilization of certain categories

    of voters. Such connections are not difficult to make as voter suppression is viewed by

    many researchers familiar with the history of American elections as a pervasive and

    consistent feature of U.S. political practice and institutions.
    xxix

    Suppression and

    demobilization tactics range from the legal to illegal, the local to the national, and have

    been adapted consistently to accommodate new legal, demographic, and strategic realities

    over the years. The wide range of tactics employed include: violence and intimidation,

    misinformation and deceptive practices, voter “caging” and challenging voters, and

    suppressive administration by partisan election officials.
    xxx

    In this context the types of

    8

    restrictive changes to electoral access we examine here represent a softer, legal form of

    voter suppression. In fact, some scholars
    xxxi

    argue that in response to a changing legal

    environment modern suppression efforts have increasingly taken the form of changes to

    state election laws. That is, the legal regime that emerged following the passage of the 24
    th

    Amendment and the Voting Rights Act has made it more difficult to engage in the blunter

    forms of voter suppression utilized in the past. From this perspective, the recent policy

    changes examined here are analogous to the restrictive laws and practices in the Jim Crow

    era designed to achieve discriminatory impacts without violating the 15th Amendment.

    Lorraine Minnite contends:

    Today, vote-suppression strategies are pursued through subtle forms of

    intimidation and obstruction that take on the mantle of law and order. The strategy

    involves exaggerating the fraud threat to justify the complexity of the electoral

    system, a complexity created and compounded by the layering of more and more

    rules to deter fraud… …Administrative complexities justified as race-neutral

    necessities for deterring voter fraud are also opportunities for administrative error

    that have come to replace opportunities for vote suppression by other means.

    This

    is the context for the proliferation of unsupported fraud allegations today. The

    allegations shrewdly veil a political strategy for winning elections by tamping

    down turnout amongst socially subordinate groups. It is the most vulnerable

    voters, those with the least education or the least experience in operating the

    machinery of the electoral process, that are the most in need of the simplest rules

    and the easiest access. Thus, it is these voters who stand in for the criminal voters

    conjured up by the spurious voter fraud allegations and imagined by the U.S.

    cultural myth of voter fraud.
    xxxii

    In the modern era, frontal attack on the right to vote is not politically acceptable, but

    targeting voter registration and access policies under the auspicious of “ballot security”

    continues to be quite viable.
    xxxiii

    This academic work outlines the conditions under which parties are more likely to

    engage in suppression and demobilization. Francis Fox Piven and colleagues remind us of

    the simple reality that: “election contests can be won by bringing more voters to the polls

    or by deterring the voters who support the opposition from casting their ballots. In other

    words, by voter mobilization or by voter suppression”.
    xxxiv

    Consequently, a principal

    expectation is that political parties may mobilize or demobilize as is electorally

    efficacious.
    xxxv

    This perspective contrasts with a classical view that suggests that

    competition drives political parties to mobilize new constituencies in pursuit of untapped

    9

    resources that may shape electoral outcomes.
    xxxvi

    Due to their comparatively low turnout

    rates overtime, the poor, African Americans, ethnic minorities, and immigrants are argued

    to become particularly attractive for mobilization. The demobilization view counters by

    highlighting the historical tensions between the legal expansion of the franchise for these

    groups and the actual practices surrounding its access.
    xxxvii

    Further, political parties are

    argued to have heightened incentives, under certain condition, to engage in the

    suppression of their opponents’ supporters. Suppression becomes especially attractive

    when rallying new voters to one’s own party is viewed as costly, unpredictable, or

    potentially disruptive to the base.
    xxxviii

    In particular, appeals and policy positions crafted to

    appeal to lower income voters may conflict with political precedents and the interests of

    more well heeled supporters.
    xxxix

    Given such constraints suppressing the competition is

    incentivized, particularly when election margins are tight.
    xl

    The take-away is that in a two-party system both parties have faced incentives to

    selectively suppress the vote and both have done so. In the 19
    th

    century and the first half

    of the 20
    th

    century, the Democratic Party engaged in multiple interlocking layers of

    suppression efforts to disenfranchise African Americans in the South, while in the North

    Republicans, albeit to a much lesser extent, made efforts to suppress Democratic-leaning

    low-income and immigrant voters.
    xli

    Since the 1960s, however, political conditions have

    aligned in a manner intensifying these incentives for the Republican Party. The civil rights

    movement and the Voting Rights Act transformed the racial character of party affiliation

    such that African-American voters came to overwhelming support Democratic candidates.

    Being perceived as African American then became a reliable marker for partisan

    preferences and an efficient guide for targeting suppression efforts. Lower income voters,

    of any race, have been similarly targeted as they disproportionately vote Democratic.
    xlii

    In

    response to a changing electoral environment, the GOP has become the central driver of

    restrictive changes to election laws and the primary perpetrators of a wide range of

    suppression efforts.
    xliii

    In short, this literature is explicit about which political party is

    more likely to engage in suppression in the current era; the groups likely to be targeted by

    such efforts; and the likelihood that voter demobilization will be “accomplished by legal

    and administrative subterfuge, with justifications that proclaim the rules and practices to

    be essential in safeguarding American democracy”.
    xliv

    10

    An Empirical Approach

    These partisan and academic accounts ascribe vastly different motivations for the

    recent rise in the proposal and passage of restrictive legislation. The following analyses

    offer a unique empirical perspective in which we systematically examine which political,

    electoral, and contextual factors are associated with whether states proposed or passed

    restrictive voter access policies between 2006 and 2011.
    xlv

    Ours is not a treatment then

    that weighs in empirically on what the effect of passing and implementing such legislation

    has been or will be. Rather, we identify a constellation of conditions that may shape the

    policy making process in this area and subject them to empirical test. Restrictive

    legislation may be a response to strategic political calculation
    xlvi

    , rational determination of

    a problem
    xlvii

    , evidence of symbolic politics and fear
    xlviii

    , interplay between the structural,

    partisan, and cultural confines of policymaking
    xlix

    , or all of the above. These forces may

    be differentially relevant depending on whether proposal or passage is under examination.

    Passing legislation, for example, is more constrained by the specific political context

    within state legislatures than is a lawmaker’s ability to propose legislation. Bills that are

    proposed, but are likely or expected to fail, may be motivated by a genuine effort by

    policymakers to achieve legislative change or by an interest in engaging in symbolic

    politics. Considering both provides multiple angles from which to build inferences as to

    what has motivated the pursuit of restrictive voter access policies. In doing so, we make a

    contemporary, empirical contribution to the larger body of work examining the conditions

    and historical moments in which parties engage in voter suppression efforts, and press the

    normatively important question of what role political parties play in securing access to the

    ballot. Further, we provide empirical footing for evaluating partisan claims regarding the

    motives driving contemporary restrictive access legislation. Today’s widespread

    accusatory rhetoric is long on dramatic flair but short on evidence. This paper fills this

    much-needed evidentiary gap.

    Independent and Control Variables

    Popular discourse, research on voter suppression, and general research on the

    policymaking process suggest a wide range of state-level factors that may increase or

    11

    decrease the likelihood that states adopt or consider restrictive voter access legislation.

    Below we identify the primary variables included in our analyses. Data sources and details

    of operationalization for all variables are available in Appendix A.

    This first set of variables center around partisan control and electoral competition.

    It is widely acknowledged that in modern era electoral politics, “vote fraud is traditionally

    the type of election irregularity that Republicans focus on, while vote theft is often cited

    by Democrats”.
    l
    Further, empirical research consistently suggests that restrictive

    legislation of the kind considered here will disproportionately deplete turnout among

    potential low-income voters and minorities, two groups that skew heavily towards the

    Democratic Party.
    li
    Given this, and the fact that party lines are influential in determining

    policy outcomes
    lii

    , we expect restrictive voter access policies will be considered and

    passed more often where Republican officials exercise more control. To examine the

    influence of Republican party control we include multiple factors that should capture the

    relative ease or difficulty Republicans have in getting their policy proposals adopted:

    Republican legislative strength, the presence of a Republican Governor, and whether or

    not the state has a divided government.

    As discussed above, the voter suppression literature suggests that parties have

    more incentive to engage in suppression in the context of tight elections. We expect the

    difference in the party vote share in the previous presidential election to impact the

    likelihood of a state to propose and pass restrictive voter access legislation. If a state has a

    smaller value on this measure, meaning the state was more competitive in the Electoral

    College, the potential pay off for suppression efforts increases dramatically. However, the

    incentives for suppression are not symmetrical for the two major parties. In the context of

    highly competitive elections, Democratic legislators are presumably less inclined to

    pursue or enact changes that are likely to depress turnout among their own supporters.

    This suggests that the impact of competitiveness may be conditional, a possibility we

    explore below with interaction effects.

    We also examine the role of local interparty competition understanding that state

    legislators may be motivated more by local partisan concerns rather than national electoral

    outcomes. State legislators in chambers closely divided along party lines may seek the

    passage of such legislation in the hopes of advantaging their own party. However, we also

    12

    expect it may be more difficult to pass such controversial legislation in the context of

    smaller majorities. The variable is a simplified version of the Ranney index
    liii

    so that

    higher values indicate more competitive scenarios (more evenly divided parties in each

    house) and total party control (100% of seats) would produce a value of 0.
    liv

    Registering to vote, maintaining registration after a move, and the logistics

    involved in actually casting a ballot are more cumbersome in the United States than other

    advanced democracies.
    lv

    It is well known that these hurdles are more burdensome for

    those of lower socio-economic status, individuals of color, new citizens, and the elderly.
    lvi

    For those concerned about voter suppression, recent legislative developments introducing

    new requirements are but the modern continuation of purposeful efforts to selectively

    suppress the vote via procedural means.
    lvii

    If this is the case, all else being equal, we

    should see restrictive voter access legislation considered and adopted in states where

    historically vulnerable Democratic constituencies turnout at higher rates, have increased

    their levels of turnout in recent elections, or both.

    We examine whether states with higher rates of minority turnout, and those that

    saw increases in minority turnout between the 2000 and 2004 and the 2004 and 2008

    Presidential elections experienced an increase in the frequency of proposal or passage of

    restrictive legislation.
    lviii

    Similarly, if legislators are sensitive to the level of turnout among

    the less affluent in ways consistent with targeted voter suppression, states where low-

    income individuals turnout at rates that more closely approximate that of wealthier voters

    should see restrictive voter legislation proposed and passed with increased frequency. This

    is especially apt as levels of upper class turnout bias have decreased between the

    Presidential election years examined here. Our variable replicates James Avery and Mark

    Peffley’s
    lix

    ratio of affluent voter turnout (over 75K) to that of lower income (under federal

    poverty line) for years 2000, 2004, and 2008 respectively. Larger values mean greater

    upper-class bias. The class bias change variable is the difference in the turnout ratio

    between the previous two Presidential elections. Positive values on this measure indicate

    that class bias has decreased.

    We also explore the possibility that restrictive legislative activity may be a

    response to overall turnout. Gains in voter turnout at the federal level are usually drawn

    disproportionately from lower-income individuals who are disproportionately people of

    13

    color.
    lx

    Aggregate gains in turnout are often read as increases among constituencies

    favorable to Democrats. Reliable and valid real-time voting/polling data for all 50 states is

    notoriously difficult to gather, let alone data on specific subgroups of voters.

    Consequently, political professionals and elected officials who aim to strategically deplete

    turnout amongst Democratic constituencies may reasonably rely on aggregate turnout as a

    proxy for electoral shifts unfavorable to them. To explore this we include a measure of

    overall turnout in the previous Presidential election.

    Proposing and passing restrictive voter access legislation in response to minority

    and lower-income electoral participation is a retrospective response—one that may

    involve initial electoral setbacks. Strategic politicians may then support restrictive

    policies prior to election season relying on purely demographic indicators deemed

    troubling for their re-election or party. We test for this motivation behind restrictive voter

    access legislation with the inclusion of the percentage of African-Americans, non-

    citizens, and the elderly within states. The logic is simple in each case. Of all racial and

    ethnic groups, the battle for the franchise is most interwoven with the African American

    experience in the U.S.. Historically, the larger the percentage of African Americans in a

    state the more difficult it is for African Americans to realize the right to vote.
    lxi

    If the

    proposal or passage of restrictive legislation is associated with state racial composition,

    this is supportive of a voter suppression narrative. The same pattern may hold for states

    with larger numbers of non-citizen residents. Many in this population will eventually

    acquire citizenship and new immigrants are more likely to vote Democratic – especially

    given the increasingly harsh immigration rhetoric in the Grand Old Party.
    lxii

    Last, if

    targeted demobilization drives restrictive legislation the opposite expectation holds for

    the percentage of elderly in a state. The elderly go to the polls at higher rates than other

    age groups and, increasingly since the 2008 election, disproportionately support

    Republican candidates.
    lxiii

    As many of the restrictive policies examined here may also

    suppress participation by elderly voters, we expect these policies may be pursued with

    less vigor in states with larger proportions of elderly residents.

    Republicans typically contend that voter IDs, proof of citizenship to vote, and

    similar policies are necessary to curtail election fraud in the wake of reforms that have

    made it easier to vote.
    lxiv

    Examples cited as representative and uncontested include

    14

    phantom voters registered under “Motor Voter Laws”, non-citizen voting, and the

    disenfranchisement of military voters. In addition, myths abound alleging massive voter

    fraud in Florida during the 2000 election and similar accusations involving ACORN in

    more recent elections.
    lxv

    A historical perspective certainly provides colorful examples of

    fraudulent electoral activities.
    lxvi

    Today, however, the largely uncontested conclusion

    within social science circles is that deliberate, systematic electoral fraud is extremely

    infrequent.
    lxvii

    Nonetheless, reports of actual voter fraud may predict the consideration

    and adoption of restrictive voter access policies. Our measure of fraud comes from the

    American Center for Voting Rights
    lxviii

    and Lorraine Minnite’s
    lxix

    exhaustive accounting

    of all fraud allegations in the 2004 election cycle.

    Interest group mobilization is also central to understanding agenda setting and

    policy outcomes. The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) is one such

    interest group uniquely active in creating and disseminating model voter identification

    legislation. This organization coordinates task forces charged with drafting model

    legislation, and such legislation for voter identification provisions has been promoted by

    ALEC.
    lxx

    Given the purported influence of ALEC, and its work at the state level, we

    expect that state delegations who have higher percentages of ALEC-affiliated members

    may be more likely to pass restrictive voter access legislation.
    lxxi

    Our third attempt to tap into perceptions of electoral fraud is a measure of political

    culture among a state’s citizens. If liberals see fraud as infrequent and diversionary, and

    conservatives view fraud as frequent and threatening to democracy, then it follows that

    states with more liberal political cultures should be less interested in considering and

    adopting restrictive voter access legislation. We use updates of William Berry, Evan

    Ringquist, Richard Fording, and Russell Hanson’s
    lxxii

    measure of citizen ideology to

    empirically characterize this dimension of state political culture.

    We also examine the contribution of policy diffusion. Simply put, states tend to

    adopt the policies that their neighboring states do.
    lxxiii

    The processes by which this occurs

    remains contested but there is little doubt that policy diffusion happens between U.S.

    states and that it occurs with neighboring states most frequently. Consequently, states may

    be more likely to consider and adopt restrictive voter access legislation as surrounding

    states do so.

    15

    Last, all of our analyses below contain a number of control variables. First, if a

    state has already passed a photo identification or proof of citizenship requirement then

    we would expect there to be less proposal and certainly less passage of such legislation.

    Second, we control for whether a state currently makes available either early or no-excuse

    absentee voting or both. If voter suppression motivates the proposal and passage of voter

    access legislation, we expect states with more accessible election practices may be more

    likely to pass restrictive legislation. Finally, states with fewer economic resources may be

    less likely to create new regulations, restrictions, or procedures, as such innovations may

    be perceived as too costly.
    lxxiv

    This factor is included in the form of real state revenue per

    capita.

    Measuring Restrictive Voter Legislation

    Our dependent variables take the form of the annual count of restrictive changes to

    voter access proposed or passed within state legislatures between 2006 and 2011.
    lxxv

    As

    noted, we focus on five different types of legislation: photo identification requirements,

    proof of citizenship requirements, laws which introduce restrictions on voter registration,

    restrictions on absentee and early voting, and restrictions on participation by felons. Table

    1 provides a breakdown of which states have passed these different types of laws and in

    which year. For the years 2006-2010 these data are drawn from the National Conference

    of State Legislatures’ Database of Election Reform Legislation.
    lxxvi

    For 2011, we draw

    upon an exhaustive report from the Brennan Center for Justice, Voting Law Changes in

    2012, which details legislative developments in these categories of laws in 2011.
    lxxvii

    [Insert Table 1 here]

    The passed legislation in Table 1 all have the potential to reduce voter access at

    various points in the registration and voting process. Perhaps most well known are new

    laws requiring photo identification to cast a ballot and proof of citizenship in order to

    register to vote. The category of registration restrictions includes policies that impact both

    voters directly and third party organizations involved in registering voters. The former

    include reductions in the window for registration, such as eliminating Election Day

    registration, or increasing state residency requirements. Restrictions on voter registration

    drives vary, but most commonly involve: requiring registration groups to register with the

    16

    state, mandatory training for anyone registering voters, special disclosure procedures, and

    short deadlines for the submission of voter registration forms. Failure to comply is often

    paired with newly established fines or criminal penalties. Restrictions on absentee voting

    include reducing the time during which absentee ballots can be applied for or accepted

    and restrictions preventing civic or political organizations from delivering absentee

    ballots. Last, early voting restrictions primarily involve reducing the number of days or

    hours during which early voting is available.

    In addition, we examine proposed legislation that would restrict voter access. This

    includes all proposed legislation along the lines described above, but also legislation that

    increase requirements or restrictions on either registration or the voting process relative to

    existing state law. For example, in a state with no voter identification requirements a bill

    to introduce identification requirements, even if these requirements do not require a

    photograph, is considered a restrictive proposal.
    lxxviii

    Similarly, bills to increase the

    requirements for registration or the receipt of absentee ballots are considered restrictive.

    Last, while no state passed new legislation related to the voting rights of felons in the

    period under examination, it was proposed in many states.
    lxxix

    Most common was

    legislation banning felons (or those convicted of particular categories of felony offenses)

    from voting for life. Other such bills included increasing the criminal penalty for

    registering to vote if one is an ineligible felon, extending a felon’s period of ineligibility to

    include parole or probation if state laws does not already prevent this, or requiring that all

    fines imposed by sentence and court costs must be paid before the restoration of voting

    rights.

    Determinants of Proposal and Passage

    In our analyses, we use specialized regression techniques that allow assessments of

    the relative strength and significance of each explanation for passing and proposing

    restrictive access legislation between 2006 and 2011 while controlling for other

    independent variables. These approaches follow the logic of classic multiple regression

    while accommodating the particular structure of, and specific issues within, our data.
    lxxx

    Below we briefly introduce the reasons for selecting each modeling approach before

    discussing the results of each set of models. All models were run using Stata version 11.2.

    17

    Proposed Legislation: GMM Analyses

    First, we examine which state-level factors are associated with a higher annual count

    of proposed restrictive voter access legislation between 2006 and 2011. The cross

    sectional nature of our dataset and the fact that the dependent variable is a count (the

    number of restrictive legislative changes proposed in a state each year) would lead

    normally to the use of a pooled Poisson modeling approach. Unfortunately, one of our

    central variables of interest violates an assumption required for the use of a pooled

    Poisson approach. The “percentage of the state legislature Republican” variable is related

    to the error term in the model which can bias estimates.
    lxxxi

    This problem, referred to as

    endogeneity, requires that accommodations be made in order to address the presence of

    such endogenous variables.
    lxxxii

    We use a generalized methods of moments (GMM)

    modeling approach because it allows one to directly address the presence of endogenous

    variables through the use of instrumental variables.
    lxxxiii

    An instrument variable, a variable

    that stands in for an endogenous factor, must be correlated with the variable they are

    replacing but not with the error term. Three variables in our analyses meet these criteria:

    our ALEC variable, the Republican Governor variable, and the citizen ideology measure.

    For the following GMM analyses, these three variables are included in place of the

    problematic percentage of the state legislature Republican variable.

    [Insert Table 2 here]

    Table 2 contains the results of 4 GMM models examining the state-level factors

    associated with higher annual counts of proposed voter restriction legislation.
    lxxxiv

    Models

    1 & 2 examine the factors associated with the proposal of all types of restrictive legislative

    changes identified above and these two models differ in only respect. The measures of

    minority turnout in the previous presidential election and state % African American are

    highly correlated and either variable is highly significant in the absence of the other.

    Models 1 & 2 introduce each of these variables individually. Both larger proportions of

    African American residents and higher levels of minority turnout in the previous

    presidential election are significantly associated with more proposed legislation. While

    such results make it difficult to adjudicate precisely between the contributions of these

    correlated but distinct factors, it is clear that the racial composition of a state is strongly

    18

    related to the proposal of changes which would restrict voter access. The minority turnout

    variable suggests that concern about the electoral consequences of minority, and

    especially African-American, turnout is a primary driver of the broader effect of state

    racial composition. Reinforcing this interpretation is that fact that in both Models 1 & 2

    larger increases in minority turnout between the previous two presidential elections are

    associated with greater frequency of proposed legislation. All of this is consistent with

    minority voter suppression and electoral considerations being central motives for the

    proposal of voter restrictions.

    Only two additional factors are found to increase the proposal of restrictive

    legislation. First, larger increases in class-biased turnout, indicating higher turnout among

    lower income voters relative to wealthy voters, is significantly associated with a larger

    volume of proposed legislative changes. Low-income individuals vote less frequently

    than the affluent in every state but where this gap has been closing in recent years,

    restrictive access legislation is more apt to be proposed. Second, states with larger

    proportions of non-citizens also saw restrictive legislation proposed more frequently. In

    sum, where African-Americans and poor people vote more frequently, and there are

    larger numbers of non-citizens, restrictive access legislation is more likely to be proposed.

    It is noteworthy that within Models 1 & 2 none of our measures of partisan control

    or electoral competition are significant. In particular, a larger proportion of Republicans in

    the state legislature is not associated with a higher frequency of proposed bills. This could

    be due to multiple factors. A legislator does not need to be in the majority party to propose

    legislation. Further, multiple bills that have little chance of passing may be proposed by

    Republicans in the minority for partisan or symbolic reasons. For example, a number of

    (disproportionately Republican) legislators in Massachusetts have introduced dozens of

    restrictive bills, none of which have passed during this period. On the other hand, a

    legislature that is dominated by Republicans may be able to pass a larger proportion of a

    smaller number of proposed bills. Further, it is possible that Republican legislators in

    solidly Republican states may have less electoral incentive to pursue such restrictive

    legislation at all. All of these considerations may complicate a simple linear relationship

    between the percentage of Republican legislators and the proposal of restrictive

    legislation.

    19

    In order to explore whether the forces driving the proposal of identification and

    proof of citizenship requirements differs from the proposal of registration, absentee, and

    early voting restrictions, Models 3 and 4 examine the count of these proposed legislative

    changes separately. The factors associated with more frequent proposal of these different

    types of restrictions are largely the same, appearing to be primarily a response to either

    levels of or change in minority turnout, levels or change in class-biased turnout, and the

    proportion of non-citizens.

    From all this a striking story emerges: the proposal of restrictive voter access

    legislation has been substantially more likely to occur where African-Americans are

    concentrated and both minorities and low-income individuals have begun turning out at

    the polls more frequently. Given that we are examining the years 2006-11, we can

    specifically attribute these developments to the significant increases in voter turnout

    among these groups in the 2008 election. States where these developments were felt more

    intensely were correspondingly more likely to propose legislation. While we can only

    infer motivation, these results strongly suggest that the proposal of these policies has been

    driven by electoral concerns differentially attuned to demobilizing African-American and

    lower-income Americans. Such patterns of association are strongly consistent with the

    expectations derived from the literature on voter suppression.

    Passed Legislation: Pooled Poisson Analyses

    In this second set of analyses we turn our attention to the actual passage of legislative

    changes that reduce voter access. As in our analysis of proposed legislation, a pooled

    Poisson approach is appropriate, but we again have a problem with the presence of

    endogenous variables. However, in this case it is not possible to use the GMM estimation

    technique for these analyses primarily because the new outcome of interest, passed

    legislation, occurs too infrequently. A fixed effects modeling approach is a commonly

    used technique to address this specific issue, the presence of endogenous factors, but this

    approach is not without some costs. Fixed effects approaches only utilize within-group, in

    our case within-state, variation over time. This significantly impacts both the cases

    involved in the analyses and the interpretation of the results. First, only cases that exhibit

    variation on the dependent variable and only variables that exhibit variation over time can

    20

    be included in such analyses. Consequently, only states that actually passed a piece of

    legislation during our 2006-2011 time period are included, resulting in a total of 150 state-

    year observations. Time-invariant variables, citizen ideology and voter fraud cases, are

    unavoidably dropped from all models. Second, it is important to stress that these analyses

    reveal only the within state developments associated with the increased likelihood of

    passage of legislation.
    lxxxv

    [Insert Table 3 here]

    Table 3 contains the results of 2 pooled-Poisson fixed effects models examining

    state level factors associated with the annual count of restrictive changes to voter access

    passed in each state. Beginning with the impact of the balance of partisan power within

    state governments, the proportion of the legislature Republican, the presence of a

    Republican Governor, and the degree of competitiveness between the parties within state

    legislatures are all significantly associated with the passage of restrictive changes. In the

    context of a fixed-effects framework, these results indicate that within states over time a

    larger proportion of Republicans in the legislature and the presence of a Republican

    Governor are associated with a higher annual count of passed legislation. These effects are

    most likely driven by the substantial increase in restrictive changes passed following the

    Republican “wave” election of 2010 where the GOP picked up 11 governorships and

    gained control of 57 state legislative chambers (up from 36 in 2009). Of the 41 adopted

    voter restrictions considered here, 34 restrictive changes (83%) passed in Republican

    controlled state legislatures. Further, of the bills requiring either photo ID or proof of

    citizenship (the policies that are the most unambiguously expected to disproportionately

    burden likely Democratic voters), all were passed in legislatures under Republican control

    (see Table 1). Given that the reductions in voter participation and access potentially

    resulting from these policies would overwhelmingly benefit Republicans, we are not

    surprised to see such a strong influence of party control on passage. The effect of the

    simplified Ranney index is negative indicating that states where the partisan balance of

    power has become more evenly divided are less likely to pass restrictive legislation. This

    likely reflects the reality that passing controversial legislation with obvious partisan

    21

    consequences is more difficult to accomplish in the context of more closely divided

    legislatures.

    Our second measure of electoral competition captures a state’s degree of

    competitiveness in national political contests: the difference in the party vote share in the

    previous presidential election. This variable is insignificant in Model 1. However in

    Model 2 it becomes significant upon the inclusion of an interaction effect testing whether

    the effect of a state’s competitiveness on the passage of restrictive legislation depends

    upon the degree of party control exercised by state Republicans. This significant

    interaction effect indicates that increases in competitiveness within presidential contests

    translates into more restrictive changes in states with larger Republican majorities and

    fewer restrictive laws in states with larger Democratic majorities. Considerations of

    national electoral outcomes, especially the presidency, appear central to passing restrictive

    changes – especially in states where both the motivation and means converge.

    After accounting for the variation in passage explained by party control and

    electoral competition, only three additional factors emerge as significant in Model 2.

    Consistent with our findings for proposed legislation, states where minority turnout has

    increased since the previous presidential election were more likely to pass restrictive

    legislation. Second, the variable capturing the proportion of the state population over 65

    years old is negative and significant, indicating that states where the elderly population is

    growing are less likely to pass restrictive changes. Last, these results suggest that states

    where election accessibility has increased through the introduction of early or no-excuse

    absentee voting were more likely to pass restrictive legislation. We do not want to

    overemphasize this last finding though as the number of states who experienced such

    increased accessibility during this time period is extremely small.

    Passed Legislation: 2011 Poisson Analyses

    As stated above, fixed effects approaches only make use of within state-variation,

    but what of the effects of stable state characteristics that do not vary much within states

    over time but do vary substantially between states? For example, a demographic factor

    like the percentage of a state’s population that is African-American will not fluctuate

    dramatically year-to-year, and we are not looking for an effect of such changes. Rather,

    22

    we are primarily interested in whether states with larger numbers of African-American

    residents are more likely to pass such legislation. In order to explore the impact of such

    cross-state differences, our last set of models present the results of multiple (traditional)

    Poisson regressions examining the determinants of the total count of restrictive changes to

    voter access passed in 2011. In 2011 state legislatures passed 22 provisions restricting

    voter access. The highest national count in the previous 5 years was 8 restrictive changes

    passed in 2006. 2011 was a year of dramatically increased legislative activity in this issue

    area and one that we suspect was influenced by a unique confluence of conditions and

    pressures that are unique to the post-2008 (and pre-2012) election years.

    [Table 4 goes about here]

    Table 4 presents the results of 4 Poisson analyses examining state-level

    determinants of the count of restrictive changes to voter access passed in 2011. Model 1

    presents the results of a reduced model containing only our measures of partisan control. It

    indicates that states with Republican governors were more likely to pass such legislation,

    but the percent of the legislature Republican is insignificant and even bears a negative

    sign. This indicates that simply holding a majority of seats does not guarantee that the

    majority party can actually pass this controversial legislation. The presence of a

    Democratic Governor’s veto will reduce the chance of a voter restriction bill becoming

    law even if passed by a Republican controlled state legislature. Additionally, in the

    context of divided government an opposition party, in this case usually the Democratic

    Party, may check the passage of legislation even if that party holds a strong majority of

    seats in one chamber. These combinations of conditions likely modify the direct effect of

    the percentage of Republican legislators on the count of restrictions passed. To examine

    this conjunctural effect more directly, we constructed a variable indicating the presence

    and strength of an unencumbered Republican majority in the state legislature.
    lxxxvi

    This

    variable simply takes the value of the percent of Republican legislators unless the

    Republicans are in the minority, the state has a divided government, or a Democratic

    governor. Under these conditions the variable takes a value of zero. Model 2-4 include

    this new variable and the variables which comprise it are dropped from the models. This

    23

    variable is both highly significant and is an extremely influential factor in these analyses

    indicating that the presence and size of an unencumbered Republican majority are

    positively associated with a larger volume of passed restrictive changes in 2011.

    In these models we do not use the difference in party vote share variable in the

    previous presidential election, our measure of the competitiveness of the state in

    presidential elections used previously. Rather, we created a dummy variable for states

    that were identified in journalism published in 2010 as potential swing states in the 2012

    election. For this list we drew primarily on outlets specializing in political reporting (e.g.

    Roll Call and POLITICO). Ten states were the most frequently discussed: Colorado,

    Florida, Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia,

    and Wisconsin. Whether these states were actually considered highly competitive swing

    states in the actual run-up to the 2012 election is not as important as the perception

    among lawmakers in 2011 that their state could play a decisive role in the upcoming

    presidential election. This potential swing state variable is insignificant in Model 3, but

    becomes significant when interacted with the unencumbered Republican majority

    variable in Model 4. The negative direct effect of being a potential swing state indicates

    that it is more difficult on average to pass such restrictive changes in potential swing

    states than in non-swing states, presumably due to heightened political consequences

    making such changes more hard fought. The significant interaction effect captures the

    fact that potential swing states with an unencumbered majority Republican were more

    likely to pass restrictive changes in 2011. However, in the absence of an unencumbered

    Republican majority potential swing states were significantly less likely to enact such

    legislation. In other words, Democrats appear to have been extra vigilant in 2011 to

    prevent the passage of such changes in potential swing states.

    The second most influential individual factor in these analyses is a state’s racial

    composition as captured by either the percentage of the state population that is African

    American or minority turnout in the 2008 election. Both factors are associated with a

    larger number of passed restrictive changes and are highly significant in the absence of

    one another. Model 3 includes minority turnout in 2008 and omits the % African

    American variable; Model 4 provides the converse. As was the case in both previous

    analyses of proposed and passed changes, controlling for a wide range of factors states

    24

    with larger proportions of minority voters and African American residents were more

    likely to pass restrictive voter legislation in 2011.

    In the remainder of this discussion we will focus on the results produced by Model

    4, which takes into account both the highly influential impact of state racial composition

    and the swing state interaction effect discussed above. A number of additional factors

    emerge as significant. In contrast to our findings in the analyses of proposed changes, it

    appears that states with larger increases in minority turnout between 2004 and 2008 are

    less likely to pass restrictive changes in 2011. So states where minorities make up a larger

    proportion of those casting a ballot are more likely to pass restrictive legislation, but if

    that state experienced a surge in minority turnout in 2008 the likelihood of passage of such

    legislation is reduced. This could be indicative of a different political calculus confronting

    legislators in the context of states with larger shares of mobilized minority voters.

    Specifically, the possibility of public anger, attention, or backlash might undermine, or

    even reverse, any electoral benefits of actually passing restrictive legislation. Indeed,

    numerous journalistic reports have suggested the passage of restrictive voter legislation in

    a few states galvanized minorities and especially African American voters to participate in

    the 2012 election.
    lxxxvii

    Concerns about such a backlash effect strikes us a plausible

    explanation for the negative influence of increased minority turnout in 2008 on the

    passage of restrictive legislation in 2011.

    Second, it also appears that states with larger levels of overall turnout in 2008 were

    less likely to pass restrictive legislation in 2011, but this is true only when controls for

    state racial composition or minority turnout are in place. Once the fact that states with

    more African-American voters and residents are more likely to pass restrictive legislation

    is accounted for, this variable captures the corresponding reality that higher levels of white

    turnout are associated with a reduced likelihood of the passage of such legislation. This

    simply underlines the centrality of racial considerations to the passage of restrictive voter

    legislation. Third, we find that states with larger proportions of elderly residents are less

    likely to enact restrictive changes. We interpret this as potentially reflective of a strategic,

    partisan recognition that restrictive policies likely to suppress lower-income and minority

    voters may also impede participation by elderly, and Republican-leaning, voters as well.

    Fourth, our measures characterizing the previous state of election accessibility indicate

    25

    that states that have already passed a photo identification or proof of citizenship law

    passed a smaller number of changes in 2011. On the other hand, states with highly

    accessible elections, as indicated by the presence of both no-excuse absentee and early

    voting, were more likely to pass restrictive changes in 2011. All of these findings are

    consistent with a voter suppression narrative.

    Lastly, the number of reported cases of voter fraud is significantly associated with

    higher rates of passage of legislation in 2011. We are skeptical that this variable represents

    any true measure of actual voter fraud and find it more reasonable to consider it an

    indicator of selective, and in some cases explicitly partisan, efforts to raise concerns about

    voter fraud. That said, some may read this as evidence that restrictive legislation has

    passed, in part, in response to actual fraud. While it is not possible to adjudicate between

    these two interpretations here, it is important to stress that in the big picture the impact of

    this factor is minor compared to the influences of the partisan, electoral, and racial factors

    identified in these analyses. Figure 4 attempts to provide exactly this, a sense of the

    respective impacts of the central factors identified as significant in these analyses. It

    displays the change in the predicted count of restrictive provisions passed in 2011 given a

    one standard deviation increase in each factor while holding all other variables at their

    mean values. For example, a hypothetical state with a proportion of African American

    residents one standard deviation above the mean and average values on all other variables

    would be expected to pass over 2.5 more restrictive provisions in 2011 than a state with

    average values on all variables (including % African American). As this figure makes

    clear, partisan control and state racial composition are overwhelmingly the two most

    influential factors associated with the passage of restrictive legislation in this year.

    [Figure 4 goes about here]

    In sum, these findings suggest that over the 2006-2011 period states that increased

    their share of Republican legislators, elected a Republican Governor, or became more

    competitive in the electoral college in the presence of a Republican majority in the state

    house were more likely to pass restrictive voter legislation. States experiencing increasing

    minority turnout were also more likely to pass restrictive legislation. Focusing on

    legislation passed in 2011, we find that more restrictive changes passed in states with

    26

    unencumbered Republican majorities, larger proportions of minority voters or African

    American residents, more reported cases of voter fraud, and more accessible election

    systems.

    Voter Restrictions as Strategic Voter Suppression

    Zooming out, a straightforward picture emerges. Our analyses identify a very

    substantial and significant association between the racial composition of a state’s

    residents or active electorate and both the proposal and passage of voter restriction

    legislation. This association is robust across multiple modeling approaches and

    controlling for a wide variety of relevant factors. Further, these findings demonstrate that

    the emergence and passage of restrictive voter access legislation is unambiguously a

    highly partisan affair, influenced by the intensity of electoral competition. The fact that in

    the context of heightened competition Republican control increases, while Democratic

    control reduces, the rate of restrictions passed underlines the highly strategic nature of

    these efforts. It also appears that demobilization efforts are not a blunt practice. Passing

    restrictive voter legislation (in noteworthy contrast to proposal) is shaped by an apparent

    sensitivity to the net impact of restrictive policies. That is, the electoral benefits of

    reforms with disproportionate suppression effects appear to be weighed against the risks

    of galvanizing turnout among groups targeted for demobilization or accidentally

    suppressing supporters. In combination, these findings are strongly consistent with a

    scenario in which minority voter suppression is a central driver of recent legislative

    developments restricting voter access.
    lxxxviii

    Indeed, we find that the best available

    measure of actual voter fraud is not associated with the proposal of legislation and is only

    a minor contributing factor to the passage of restrictive changes in 2011. This is not a

    particularly surprising finding as serious empirical attempts to quantify the extent of voter

    fraud have consistently found such fraud to be exceedingly rare in modern U.S.

    elections.
    lxxxix

    These findings are relevant to current partisan and legal debates regarding

    voter restrictions, our understanding of the conditions that incentivize suppression efforts,

    and broader developments across multiple policy arenas that have reduced electoral

    access among

    the socially marginalized.

    27

    The 2012 Election and Beyond

    A typical cable news night surrounding election 2012 featured barely civil

    exchanges between Democratic operatives decrying how restrictive legislation aims to

    keep their constituents from the polls and Republican pundits scoffing at the allegation,

    making their own case that such legislation protects the legitimacy of the electoral

    process by combating fraud. Our findings confirm that Democrats are justified in their

    concern that restrictive voter legislation takes aim along racial lines with strategic

    partisan intent. But if that is the case, how do we interpret the President Obama’s

    decisive victory in 2012? Some may read this as clear evidence that either reforms have

    not suppressed voters or that voter suppression efforts did not work. This narrow focus on

    the outcome in the presidential race both obscures the impacts of these policies and

    misreads the extent to which the 2012 election represented a true test of the effects of

    these laws.

    Most importantly, many of the most onerous restrictive changes were not in effect

    for the 2012 election.
    xc

    While we have focused above on the proposal and passage of

    restrictive legislation, these developments have provoked a wide-ranging pushback in

    defense of voter access. In 11 states laws were blocked, weakened, or postponed by

    courts or the Department of Justice and in two states, Maine and Ohio, restrictive laws

    were repealed by citizens.
    xci

    Further, the effects of some of these laws can be subtle,

    difficult to discern, and most influential at the margins. For example, the results of a wide

    range of studies indicate that most registered voters do possess the forms of identification

    required by voter ID laws.
    xcii

    Consequently, such laws may do little to suppress routine

    voters, but may serve to reduce participation among the eligible unregistered population

    who are much more likely to lack basic forms of required identification. It has been

    suggested that “[t]he real value of restrictive voter ID may be in what we might call

    ‘surge protection’ against the kind of mobilization of new, first-time voters who very

    likely handed Obama his election [in 2008].”
    xciii

    Such effects may be consequential, but

    are difficult to measure empirically.

    That said, the impacts of other restrictive changes have been much less subtle.

    Most infamously in Florida, one study estimates that roughly 200,000 voters were

    discouraged from voting in the 2012 election due to long lines
    xciv

    and another study found

    28

    that racial and ethnic minorities as well as Democrats were more likely to experience

    significantly longer waits.
    xcv

    These long lines were, in part, a direct result of a reduction

    in the number of early voting days passed by the Florida legislature in 2011. The

    estimates from these studies in Florida alone underline the sobering reality of the

    potential impact of these laws in the context of a tight election. Since the 2012 election,

    thus far restrictive laws have been passed or proposed by Republicans in Arkansas,

    Missouri, Montana, and Virginia. Republicans appear undeterred in their pursuit of these

    restrictive policies and this most recent presidential defeat may only serve to galvanize

    suppression efforts.

    In addition, the Supreme Court recently decided to consider a constitutional

    challenge to Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. Section 5 requires that states and

    localities determined to have a history of undermining the franchise get preclearance

    from the Department of Justice or the U.S. District Court in D.C. before enacting

    electoral changes to ensure these alterations do not have an adverse effect on racial or

    linguistic minorities. This is what allowed the Department of Justice to block or weaken

    restrictive access legislation in states like Florida, Texas, and South Carolina in the run-

    up to the 2012 election. Currently, in jurisdictions covered by Section 5 the burden of

    proof lies on state or local governments to demonstrate that electoral changes do not have

    a discriminatory or retrogressive impact on minorities before legislation goes into effect.

    If overturned, challenges may still be brought but these suits will be a response to new

    laws after they have been adopted and the burden of proof will lie with those bringing the

    challenge. Further, final rulings could come after relevant elections. A central argument

    made against the constitutionality of Section 5 is that it is outdated – covered states no

    longer intend to discriminate or do so. Our findings call such assertions into question and,

    more broadly, suggest that challenges to the implementation and passage of restrictive

    access legislation are merited on the grounds of racial bias.

    Why the Recent Intensification of Suppression Efforts?

    Overall, we find strong empirical support for the position that recent legislative

    efforts to restrict voter access are usefully conceptualized as yet another wave of election

    reforms, in a long history for such reforms, pursued in order to demobilize and suppress

    29

    particular categories of voters for partisan gain. But what is it about the current political

    moment that has lead to the recent increase in the proposal and passage of legislation? A

    widely acknowledged broad contextual factor is certainly the competitiveness of

    presidential elections and the tight balance of congressional power in recent decades.

    Tighter election margins incentivize not just voter suppression efforts, but a wide range

    of tactics, including redistricting and legal challenges intended to shape election

    outcomes.
    xcvi

    In the context of somewhat long-standing pressures to demobilize

    Democratic opponents, why the efforts to reduce electoral access in the mid-to-late

    2000s? The marriage of our findings and the voter suppression literature suggest

    Republicans may have done so for a number of reasons: changing demographics; recent

    Republican electoral losses; an unforgiving internal shift within the party to the

    ideological right; and the party faithful’s response to vote fraud mythology.

    Immediately following the 2012 election a specific narrative emerged

    highlighting the manner in which the changing demographic composition of the United

    States and the heavy skew of minority groups towards the Democrats both provided an

    advantage for President Obama and potentially spelled trouble for the future prospects of

    the GOP. Our findings regarding the influence of race and minority turnout suggest that

    many Republicans were not unaware of these realities in the years preceding the 2012

    election. This is understandable as the 2008 election was a particularly instructive

    experience in this specific regard. The historic magnitude of Republican losses in the

    2008 election are hard to overstate.
    xcvii

    Minority turnout and Democratic vote margins

    among minority voters increased substantially in 2008 and this boost is widely viewed as

    critical to Obama’s election.
    xcviii

    Republican upsets at the presidential level in the South,

    (Florida, North Carolina and Virginia) were particularly painful and alarming to many

    Republicans. “These three southern victories can be ascribed to two factors: unified bloc

    voting by black voters combined with some crossover support by a minority of whites…

    …the Obama-Biden ticket received almost unanimous support from black voters.”
    xcix

    Given these realities, it has been argued that the accelerated proposal and passage

    of restrictive election reforms represent a backlash against both the broader demographic

    changes widely viewed as troublesome for Republicans and strong minority turnout and

    support for the first non-white major party presidential nominee. Our findings are entirely

    30

    consistent with such a backlash narrative or even that of a strategic elite-driven

    “frontlash” in response to political setbacks as conceptualized by Velsa Weaver.
    c
    Weaver

    describes a “frontlash” as:

    “the process by which losers in a conflict become the architects of a new program,

    manipulating the issue space and altering the dimension of conflict in an effort to

    regain their command of the agenda. Frontlash hinges on the presence of winners

    and losers of a recent political conflict…. …The dissatisfied parties seek openings

    to mobilize a new issue, alter the dimensions of the conflict, or, in the

    terminology of social movement theorists, “shift the locus of attack.”
    ci

    In contrast to a traditional conception of a political backlash, exemplified perhaps in a

    process where resentment among white voters with racial progress shapes electoral

    outcomes, “[f]rontlash is preemptive, innovative, proactive, and, above all, strategic.”
    cii

    Further, while the political momentum in backlash narratives are often a bottom-up

    account focused on the behavior and preferences of dissatisfied voters from the bottom

    up, a frontlash is conceptualized as an elite countermovement in response to some type of

    political defeat. We consider this a useful conceptual frame for understanding the rise of

    restrictive voter legislation, given the elite-driven nature of increased attention and policy

    responses to the issue of voter fraud, and both the timing and strategic pattern of these

    legislative efforts.

    Also potentially at play in the recent GOP pursuit of restrictive legislation are the

    unintended ramifications of the declining proportion and influence of moderates within

    the party. As we have detailed, a voter suppression perspective argues that parties have an

    incentive to suppress their opponents, as opposed to mobilizing new voters, when these

    new voters bring demands or positions that conflict with their existing base of supporters.

    In recent decades the Republican Party has both become more conservative on average

    and more ideologically homogenous.
    ciii

    As Republicans in recent election cycles have

    found themselves needing to increasingly move to the political right to win their

    primaries, they have increasingly alienated particular groups of voters such as Latinos

    and women. We suspect that when a party’s platform or rhetoric reduces the possibility

    of building electoral coalitions and bringing in new voters, while representing the

    interests of a demographically shrinking base, this alone increases the incentive to engage

    in voter suppression. In a two party system, when mobilizing supporters is insufficient,

    31

    demobilizing opponents may provide the only route to victory. The increasing effort put

    into voter suppression by the GOP in recent years may then be a reflection, in part, of

    these internal ideological and practical constraints on mobilizing new voters.

    Finally, the steady amplification of voter fraud mythology since the 2008 election

    has undoubtedly contributed to the increased rate of restrictive legislative activity. The

    historical deployment of fraud charges reminds that doing so is often a valuable political

    tool for both explaining electoral losses and mobilizing supporters. Minnite goes as far as

    to argue that the voter fraud myth has come to represent a “new Southern strategy” in

    which the Republican base is “energized by the tarring of Democrats as cheaters and the

    association of Democrats with a racialized crime-prone underclass.”
    civ

    For many

    conservatives, fraud is now genuinely believed to play an influential role in American

    political life. We find this unfortunate as such outsized concern will undoubtedly serve to

    both justify and prompt continuing pressure for restrictive reforms while obscuring

    attention to the very real problems that riddle our electoral institutions and practices.

    Cumulative Voter Exclusion: Felon Disenfranchisement, Modern Poverty Governance, &

    Restrictive Access Legislation

    Our findings are deeply troubling in their own right. This is compounded by the

    fact that we view this legislation as yet an additional layer of exclusionary policy

    practices which work to reduce political participation and electoral access by the socially

    marginalized. The manner in which these restrictions have unfolded bear a number of

    similarities with modern developments in other policy arenas, especially criminal justice

    policy and poverty governance.
    cv

    First, they are race, gender and class neutral on paper,

    but have disparate political impacts in practice. Second, much of this exclusionary policy

    action has occurred at the state-level where policymakers are less encumbered by federal

    oversight. Third, the resulting variation in the accessibility to rights and benefits across

    states is strongly shaped by considerations of race and social control. The net effect of

    these policy regimes is to reduce, to varying degrees, full political incorporation among

    the socially marginalized.

    We have described recent legislative efforts to reduce electoral access, efforts that

    have been pursued more aggressively in states with more minority voters. These

    32

    developments rest on top of and interact with institutions and policies shaped by previous

    struggles over who deserves access to the full benefits and rights of citizenship. Massive

    increases in incarceration since the 1970s have combined with state-level variation in

    felon disenfranchisement laws so that 1 in 13 African American men were ineligible to

    vote in 2010 – compared to 1 in 40 of all Americans.
    cvi

    Differences in state

    disenfranchisement laws produce a situation where disenfranchisement rates are the

    highest in 7 Southern states and most potent in Florida, Kentucky, and Virginia where 1

    in 5 African Americans legally cannot vote.
    cvii

    Felon disenfranchisement laws are an

    enduring legacy of previous suppression efforts shaped directly by considerations of

    racial impacts and social control. The increased punitiveness of the American criminal

    justice system has dramatically increased the proportion of Americans currently

    disenfranchised by this legacy, with African-Americans, the economically insecure, and

    minorities disproportionately affected. This is the most direct of exclusionary policies

    regarding access to the vote: legally limiting who is eligible to vote along racial and class

    lines.

    Electoral participation is also impacted by access to basic economic security and

    support.
    cviii

    Since the mid-1990s Republicans have successfully led the charge, often with

    Democratic complicacy, to dramatically decrease the receipt of means-tested social

    welfare support while subjecting those who continue to receive support to harsh,

    supervisory, and paternalistic policies.
    cix

    The centrality of states in crafting their poverty

    policies under relatively weak federal guidelines has allowed for racial considerations

    and social control to continue to define this new poverty governance.
    cx

    African-

    Americans are more likely to live in states and localities that provide less generous

    benefits and are more likely to be punitively sanctioned than their white counterparts in

    the same state.
    cxi

    These disempowering policy experiences deplete political efficacy and

    participation beyond the already lowered participatory expectations stemming from low

    socio-economic status.
    cxii

    For our purposes, the negative impact on voting is most

    important. Felony disenfranchisement means one cannot vote. For the socially

    marginalized who can vote, existing poverty governance may undermine the political

    efficacy to do so for many through direct policy learning in punitive programs and by

    often failing to alleviate economic insecurity. As Joe Soss, Richard Fording, and Sanford

    33

    Schram argue, current poverty governance “deepens the political marginality of the poor,

    channeling them into positions of civic inferiority and isolation.”
    cxiii

    Viewed in the context of these intersecting policy developments, recent restrictive

    voter access policies introduce still additional hurdles to those that already exist for

    minorities, African-Americans, and lower-income citizens. In their current practice,

    felony disenfranchisement, means-tested social welfare programs, and restrictive access

    legislation make having the franchise, a welcoming path to accessing it, and the desire to

    use it less likely for the poor and minorities in the United States. From this vantage,

    recent passage of restrictive voter policies is an important prong in a broader suite of

    policies expanding a form of conditional and exclusionary American citizenship.
    cxiv

    In

    silent concert these policies work to undermine democratic voice for the most vulnerable.

    The news then is not good for the inclusiveness of American democracy, but the

    trend we have examined does not represent a foregone conclusion. The recent wave of

    restrictive access legislation is rooted in long-standing racial and classist motivations

    revived for modern deployment. While we consider our findings consistent with this

    historical perspective on these developments, we also recognize the discursive and

    political power of the voter fraud narrative and the effectiveness of those who have

    vigorously purveyed this narrative. Simultaneously, the multifaceted political and legal

    pushback that has emerged to counter recent efforts to reduce voter access underlines that

    it is not only the advocates of restriction that have been exercising their political agency,

    but also the supporters of inclusive voting rights.
    cxv

    As a result, the issue is currently a

    matter of serious contestation. Supporters of voting rights can also take heart from the

    fact that the Democratic party, as an enduring political institution (as opposed to a social

    movement), has a strong and consistent electoral incentive to fight and attempt to reverse

    recently enacted restrictive policies. On the other hand, given the internal dynamics

    within the GOP and the current political landscape facing this party, we expect the

    incentives to engage in suppression and other electoral manipulations to remain

    heightened and to pose a continuing and significant threat to full electoral participation in

    the years to come
    cxvi

    . The future of voting rights in the US will be determined by the

    ongoing political contest between the Republican and Democratic parties. And at the

    34

    same time, this contest itself will be influenced by the continuing political and legal

    struggles over access to the ballot.

    35

    Works Cited

    American Association of Retired People. 2012. “Help Stop Voter Suppression in

    Virginia.” https://action.aarp.org/site/Advocacy?cmd=display&page=UserAction

    &id=1836. (download date March 23,

    2012)

    American Center for Voting Rights, Legislative Fund. August 2005. “Vote Fraud,

    Intimidation and Suppression in the 2004 Presidential Election.” Washington DC.

    Avery, James M., and Mark Peffley. 2005. “Voter Registration Requirements, Voter

    Turnout, and Welfare Eligibility Policy.” State Politics and Policy Quarterly 5

    (1): 47–67.

    Bartels, Larry. 2012. Unequal Democracy: The Political Economy of the New Gilded

    Age. Princeton University Press.

    Battista, James Coleman. 2011. “Formal and Perceived Leadership Power in U.S. States.”

    State Politics and Policy Quarterly 11(1): 102-118.

    Battista, James Coleman and Jesse T. Richman. 2011. “Party Pressure in the U.S. State

    Legislatures.” Legislative Studies Quarterly. 36(3): 397-422.

    Beckett, Katherine and Bruce Western. 2001. “Governing Social Marginality: Welfare,

    Incarceration, and the Transformation of State Policy.” Punishment & Society.

    31(1): 43-59.

    Bentele, Keith and Lisa Nicoli. 2012. “Ending Access As We Know It: State Welfare

    Benefit Coverage in the TANF Era.” Social Service Review. 64(1): 223-268.

    Berry, Frances Stokes, and William D. Berry. 1990. “State Lottery Adoptions as Policy

    Innovations: An Event History Analysis”. American Political Science Review. 84

    (2):395-415

    Berry, William, Evan Ringquist, Richard Fording, and Russell Hanson. 1998.

    “Measuring Citizen and Government Ideology in the American States, 1960-93.

    American Journal of Politics. 42: 327-348.

    Berman, Ari. August 30, 2011. “The GOP War on Voting.” Rolling Stone.

    http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-gop-war-on-voting-20110830.

    (download date November 12,

    2011).

    Berkowitz, Daniel and Karen B. Clay.2011. The Evolution of a Nation: How Geography

    and Law Shaped the American States. Princeton: Princeton University

    Press.

    Bloom, Jordan. 2012. “This Week in Voter ID: AG Holder Challenges Texas, Judge

    Nixes Wisconsin Law.” The American Conservative.

    http://www.theamericanconservative.com/blog/2012/03/13/this-week-in-voter-id-

    ag-holder-challenges-texas-judge-nixes-wisc-law/

    (download date April 7, 2012)

    Boehmke, Frederick and Richard Winter. 2004. “Disentangling Diffusion: The Effects

    of Social Learning and Economic Competition on State Policy Innovation and

    Expansion.” Political Research Quarterly. 57(1): 39-51.nice

    Brady, Henry and John McNulty. 2011. “Turning Out to Vote: The Costs of Finding and

    Getting to the Polling Place.” American Political Science Review. 105: 115-134.

    Brooks, Sarah M. 2007. “When Does Diffusion Matter? Explaining the Spread of

    Structural Pension Reforms across Nations.” The Journal of Politics, 69, 3,

    August, p. 701-715.

    Brown, Susan. May 13, 2012. “Voter ID Laws Protect Electoral Process.”

    36

    http://townhall.com/columnists/susanbrown/2012/03/13/voter_id_laws_protect_el

    ectoralprocess/page/full/. (download date April 7, 2012).

    Bullock III, Charles S. & Ronald K. Gaddie. 2009. The Triumph of Voting Rights in the

    South. University of Oklahoma Press: Norman.

    Burden, Barry, David Canon, Kenneth Mayer, and Donald Moynihan. 2009. “The

    Effects and Costs of Early Voting, Election Day Registration, and Same Day

    Registration in the 2008 Elections.” Pew Charitable Trust.

    Burke, Lauren Victoria. March 12, 2012. “Sharpton, CBC Join Forces on Voter

    Suppression.” The Michigan Citizen. http://michigancitizen.com/sharpton-cbc-

    join-forces-on-voter-suppression-p10905-75.htm (download date March 24,

    2012)

    Caine, Bruce, Todd Donovan. and Caroline Tolbert. 2008. Democracy in the States:

    Experiments in Election Reform. Brookings Institution Press

    Campbell, Don. 2008. “Why Ga. Should Be On GOP’s Mind; Tour Atlanta’s Suburbs to

    Get a Sense of Where this Country is Headed. The Minority Population is

    Booming, and the Math is Decidedly Against the GOP.” USA Today. November

    18, pg. 11A.

    Campbell, Tracy. 2006. Deliver the Vote: A History of Election Fraud, an American

    Political Tradition, 1742-2004. Basic Books.

    Cohen, Adam. 2009. “Foreward.” In Keeping Down the Black Vote: Race and the

    Demobilization of American Voters. Frances Fox Piven, Lorraine Minnite, and

    Margaret Groarke. The New Press. Xi-xviii.

    Conservative Hideout 2.0. “Rolling Stone Unleashed Voter Disenfranchisement

    Propaganda.” September 2, 2011.

    http://conservativehideout.com/2011/09/02/rolling-stone-unleashes-voter-

    disenfranchisement-propaganda/ (download date April 7, 2012)

    Cooper, Michael. October 2, 2011. “New State Rules Raising Hurdles at Voting Booth.”

    The New York Times. A1
    Davenport, Jim. October 19, 2011. “Voter ID Law Hits Black Areas: 1,977 Nonwhite

    Voters Lack State-Issued Photo.” Associated Press.

    Dilday, Kay. December 6, 2011. “The NAACP Exposesc Voter Suppression Schemes.”

    The Guardian.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/dec/06/naacp-

    exposes-voter-suppression-scheme. (download date April 7, 2012).

    Dougherty, Conor. Jul 21 2009. Minority Turnout Was Critical to Obama’s Election,

    Data Show. The Wall Street Journal. Accessed: Feb 13 2013

    Dreier, Pater and Christopher Martin. 2010. “How ACORN Was Framed: Political

    Controversy and Media Agenda Setting.” Perspectives on Politics. 8(3): 761-792.

    Edelman, Murray. 1964. The Symbolic Uses of Politics. Urbana, IL: University of

    Illinois Press.

    37

    _____. 1988. Constructing the Political Spectacle. Chicago, IL: University of

    Chicago Press.

    Fenton, John. 1979. “Turnout and the Two-Party Vote.” The Journal of Politics. 41(1):

    229-234.

    Fording, Richard. 2001. “The Political Response to Black Insurgency: A Critical Test

    of Competing Theories of the State.” American Political Science Review. 95(1):

    115-131

    Fortier, John. 2006. Absentee and Early Voting: Trends, Promises, and Perils.

    Washington, DC: American Enterprise Institute Press.

    Frey, William H. May 2012. Why Minorities Will Decide the 2012 U.S. Election. The

    Brookings Institute. Accessed: Feb 13 2013.

    http://www.brookings.edu/research/opinions/2012/05/01-race-elections-frey

    Frymer, Paul. 1999. Uneasy Alliances: Race and Party Competition in America.

    Princeton: Princeton University Press.

    Fund, John. 2008. Stealing Elections: How Voter Fraud Threatens Our Democracy.

    Encounter Books.

    Fund, John and Hans von Spakovsky. 2012. Who’s Counting?: How Fraudsters and

    Bureaucrats Put Your Vote at Risk. New York, NY: Encounter Books.

    Gimpel, James. February 2010. “Immigration, Political Realignment, and the Demise of

    Republican Political Prospects. Center for Immigration Studies.

    http://www.cis.org/republican-demise (download date April 7, 2012)

    Glassner, Barry. 1999. The Culture of Fear: Why Americans are Afraid of the Wrong

    Things. New York: Basic Books.

    Green, Donald, Bradley Palmquist, and Eric Schickler. 2002. Partisan Hearts and Minds:

    Political Parties and the Social Identities of Voters. New Haven: Yale University

    Press.

    Greenberg, Mark, Jodie Levin-Epstein, Rutledge Hutson, Theodora Ooms.

    2002(Winter). “The1996 Welfare Law: Key Elements and Reauthorization

    Issues Affecting Children.” The Future of Children. 12(1): 26-40.

    Greenwald, Robert. Decemberr 16, 2011. “Help NAACP End Voter Suppression.”

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-greenwald/help-naacp-end-voter-

    supp_b_1154815.html (download date June 3, 2012)

    Gronke, Paul, Eva Galanes-Rosenbaum, and Peter A. Miller. 2008. “Early Voting and

    Voter Turnout.” In Democracy in the States: Experiments in Election Reform, ed.

    Bruce E. Cain, Todd Donovan, and Caroline J. Tolbert. Washington, DC:

    Brookings Institution Press.

    Gumbel, Andrew. 2005. Steal This Vote: Dirty Elections and the Rotten History of

    Democracy in America. National Books.

    Hacker, Jacob and Paul Pierson. 2010. Winner-Take-All Politics: How Washington Made

    the Rich Richer–and Turned Its Back on the Middle Class. Simon & Schuster

    Hasen, Richard. 2012. The Voting Wars: From Florida 2000 to the Next Election

    Meltdown.

    New Haven: Yale University Press.

    Hauser, Jeff. 2013. “A Temporary Victory: Looking Ahead to 2014 and Beyond.”

    DEMOCRACY. 28(Spring): 32-37.

    38

    Hawkins, Matt. 2012. “The NC Coastal Conservative Conference: Voter-Fraud-O-

    Rama.” http://rightwingnews.com/uncategorized/the-nc-coastal-conservative-

    conference-voterfraudorama-pics/ (download date April 7, 2012).

    Herron, Michael C. and Daniel A. Smith. 2012. “Souls to the Polls: Early Voting in

    Florida in the Shadow of House Bill 1355.” Election Law Journal. 11(3): 331-

    347.

    Herron, Michael C. and Daniel A. Smith. unpublished. “Early Voting in Florida in the

    Aftermath of House Bill 1355.”

    Isreal, John. March 21, 2012. “DOJ Opposes New Florida Restriction, Citing Possible

    Discriminatory Purpose or Effect.”

    http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2012/03/21/449068/doj-opposes-new-florida-

    voting-restrictions/?mobile=nc (download date March 24, 2012)

    Isaac, Jeffrey, ed. 2012. “Perspectives on Politics. Review Symposium: Neoliberalism,

    Race, and the American Welfare State — A Discussion of Joe Soss, Richard C.

    Fording, and Sanford F. Schram’s Disciplining the Poor: Neoliberal Paternalism

    and the Persistent Power of Race.” 10(4): 979-992.

    Jacobs, Lawrence R.. 1992. “Institutions and Culture: Health Policy and Public Opinion

    in the U.S. and Britain.” World Politics. 44(2): 179-209

    _____ and Desmond King, ed. 2009. The Unsustainable American State. New York:

    Oxford University Press,

    Jealous, Benjamin Todd. December 14, 2011. NAACAP. “We’re Turning the Tide.”

    http://www.naacp.org/blog/entry/were-turning-the-tide (Download date March 25,

    2012)

    Jenkins, Shannon. 2008. “Party Influence on Roll Call Voting: A View from the U.S.

    States.” State Politics and Policy Quarterly. 8(3) 239-262.

    Judis, John B. and Ruy Teixeira. 2002. The Emerging Democratic Majority. New York:

    Simon and Schuster.

    Karch, Andrew. 2007. Democratic Laboratories: Policy Diffusion Among the American

    States. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

    Katzenstein, Mary Fainsod, Leila Mohsen Ibrahim, and Katherine Rubin. 2010. “The

    Dark Side of American Liberalism and Felony Disenfranchisement.”

    Perspectives on Politics. 8(4): 1035-1054.

    _____. 2007. “Emerging Issues and Future Directions in State Policy Diffusion

    Research.” State Politics and Policy Quarterly. 7(1): 54-80.

    Kellogg, Sarah. 2012. “Voter ID Laws: Partisan Electioneering or Good Government?”

    Washington Lawyer. September 2012.

    http://www.dcbar.org/for_lawyers/resources/publications/washington_lawyer/sept

    ember_2012/vote.cfm (Download date May 25, 2013)

    Key, V.O., Jr. 1949. Southern Politics in State and Nation. New York: Knopf.

    Keyssar, Alexander. 2009. The Right to Vote: The Contested History of Democracy in

    the United States. New York: Basic Books.

    _____.2011. ”How Americans Vote”. Election Law Journal: Rules, Politics, and Policy.

    10(4): 471-473.

    _____.2012.”The Strange Career of Voter Suppression”. The New York Times. The

    Opinion Pages. February 12.

    King, Desmond S. and Rogers M. Smith. 2005. “Racial Orders in American Political

    39

    Development.” American Political Science Review. 99(1): 75-92.

    _____. 2011. Still a House Divided: Race and Politics in Obama’s America. Princeton:

    Princeton University Press.

    King, Desmond, Robert C. Lieberman, Gretchen Ritter, and Laurence Whitehead, eds.

    2009. Democratization in America: A Comparative-Historical Analysis.

    Baltimore: Johns Hopkins

    Kingdon, John W.. 2002. Agendas, Alternatives and Public Policies. 2
    nd

    ed. Addison-

    Wesley

    Levitsky, Steven and Lucen Way. 2010. Competitive Authoritarianism: Hybrid Regimes

    !

    After the Cold War. Cambridge University Press.

    !

    Levitt, Justin. 2007. “The Truth About Voter Fraud.”

    http://www.brennancenter.org/publication/truth-about-voter-fraud

    Lindberg, Staffan. 2009. Democratization by Elections: A New Mode of Transition.

    John Hopkins University Press.

    Maddow, Rachel. October 19, 2011a. “Age Against the Machine.”

    http://video.msnbc.msn.com/the-rachel-maddow-show/45663037#45663037

    (download

    date March 24, 2012)

    _____. October 27, 2011b. “American Democracy a Casualty of Republican War on

    Voting.” http://fuckconservatives.wordpress.com/2011/10/27/rachel-maddow-

    american-democracy-a-casualty-of-republican-war-on-voting/ (download date

    March 24,

    2012)

    _____. October 12, 2011c. “GOP War on Voting Encounters Rising Defense.”

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMpkUsTz8N4 (download date March 24,

    2012)

    _____. October 5, 2011d. “Republicans Try to Suppress Minority Vote.”

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Vlf6F3fOK0&feature=related (download

    date March 24, 2012)

    Mahanta, Siddharta. October 19, 2011. “South Carolina Voter ID Law: Yep, Pretty

    Discriminating.” Mother Jones.
    Manza, Jeff and Christopher Uggen. 2004. “Punishment and Democracy:

    Disenfranchisement of Nonincarcerated Felons in the United States.” Perspectives

    on Politics. 2(3): 491-505.

    Martin, Gordon. February 5 2012. “Democracy Under Attack in Voter Suppression

    Scheme.” Boston Herald.

    Mayhew, David. 1974. The Electoral Connection. New Haven, CT: Yale University

    Press.

    McCarty, Nolan, Keith Poole, and Howard Rosenthal. 2008. Polarized America: The

    Dance of Ideology and Unequal Riches. MIT Press.

    Mettler, Suzanne and Joe Soss. 2004. “The Consequences of Public Policy for

    Democratic Citizenship: Bridging Policy Studies and Mass Politics.”

    Perspectives on Politics. 2(1): 55-73.

    Meyers, Jim and Kathleen Walter. March 22 2011. “Ken Blackwell: Holder’s ‘All-Out

    War’ on Voter IDs Is Obama Re-election Tool.” NewMax.

    http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/Blackwell-Holder-Voter-

    ID/2012/03/22/id/433560 (Download date March 24, 2012)

    40

    Minnite, Lorraine. 2010. The Myth of Voter Fraud. Cornell, NY: Cornell University

    Press.

    Mintrom, Michael. 1997. “Policy Entrepreneurs and the Diffusion of Innovation.”

    American Journal of Political Science 42:738-770.

    Mooney, Christopher. 2011. “Modeling Regional Effects on State Policy Diffusion.”

    Political Research Quarterly. 54(1): 103-124.

    Mooney, Christopher Z., and Mei-Hsien Lee. 1995. “Legislating Morality in the

    American States: The Case of Pre-Roe Abortion Regulation Reform”. American

    Journal of Political Science 39: 599-627.

    Moreno, Ivan and Nicolas Riccardi. May 20, 2013. “Democrats Strike Back at GOP

    Voting Measures.” Associated Press,

    http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_DEMOCRATS_VOTING?SITE=AP

    &SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT (Download May 25, 2013)

    Mundlak, Yair. 1978. “On the Pooling of Times Series and Cross Section Data.”

    Econometrica 46 (1): 69-85.

    Musgrove, George. 2012. Rumor, Repression, and Racial Politics: How the Harassment

    of Black Elected Officials Shaped Post-Civil Rights America. University of

    Georgia Press.

    National Council of State Legislatures. 2012. Legislatures & Elections. Elections &

    Campaigns. Voter ID: State Requirements. http://www.ncsl.org/legislatures-

    elections/elections/voter-id-state-requirements.aspx (download date Dec 12,

    2011).

    Nice, David. 1994. Policy Innovation in State Government. Ames: Iowa State Press.

    Noble, Charles. 1997. Welfare as We Knew It: A Political History of the American

    Welfare State. New York: Oxford University Press.

    O’Brien, Erin. 2009. The Politics of Identity: Solidarity Building among America’s

    Working Poor. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.

    Overton, Spencer. 2007. Stealing Democracy: The New Politics of Voter Suppression.

    W.W. Norton.

    Peters, Guy. 1999. American Public Policy: Promise and Performance. New York:

    Chatham House.

    Piven, Francis Fox and Richard Cloward. 1988. Why Americans Don’t Vote. Pantheon.

    _____. 2000. Why Americans Still Don’t Vote: And Why Politicians Want It That Way.

    Boston: Beacon Press.

    Piven, Francis Fox, Lorainne Minnite, Margaret Groarke. 2009. Keeping Down the

    Black Vote: Race and the Demobilization of American Voters. New York: NYU

    Press.

    Powers, Scott and David Damron. “Analysis: More than 200,000 would-be voters gave

    up.” The Orlando Sentinel 19 Jan. 2013.

    Rosenstone, Steven and Raymond Wolfinger. 1978. “The Effect of Registration Laws

    on Voter Turnout.” The American Political Science Review. 72(1): 22-45.

    _____, and John Mark Hansen. 1993. Mobilization, Participation, and Democracy in

    America.

    New York: Macmillan Publishing Company

    Sabato, Larry and Glenn Simpson. 1996. Dirty Little Secrets: The Persistence of

    Corruption in American Politics. New York: Times Books

    41

    Schattschneider, E.E. 1942. “Party Government”. National Municipal Review.31(4):

    220-2

    42

    _____.1960. The Semi-Sovereign People: A Realist’s View of Democracy in America.

    Cengage Learning.

    Schedler, Andreas. 2002. “The Nested Game of Democratization by Elections.”

    International Political Science Review. 23(1): 103-122

    _____.2006. Electoral Authoritarianism: The Dynamics of Unfree Competition. Lynne

    Rienner.

    Schneider, Helen and Anne Ingram. 1993. “Social Construction of Target Populations:

    Implications for Politics and Policy.” American Political Science Review. 87(2):

    334-

    47

    Seitz-Wald, Alex. Jun 25 2012. “Penn. Republican: Voter ID will help Romney Win.”

    Salon. Accessed: Feb 7 2013.

    http://www.salon.com/2012/06/25/penn_republican_voter_id_will_help_romney_

    win/

    Schultz, David, A. “Less than Fundamental: The Myth of Voter Fraud and the Coming of

    the Second Great Disenfranchisement” William Mitchell Law Review 34 (2008):

    484.

    Secrest, Barry. April 3, 2012. “The Real Reason Why Liberals Hate Voter Id.”

    http://www.conservativerefocus.com/blog5.php/2012/04/03/the-real-reason-why-

    liberals-hate-voter-id-four-indiana-democrats-charged-with-2008-election-fraud

    (download date April 7, 2012)

    Sharpton, Al. 2011a. http://video.msnbc.msn.com/politicsnation/45800286#45800286

    (download date March 24, 2012)

    _____. October 11, 2011b http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dJTfATg14I (download

    date March 24, 2012).

    _____. 2012a. http://vimeo.com/33262597 (download date March 24, 2012);

    Shefter, Martin. 1994. Political Parties and the State: The American Historical

    Experience. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

    Siddharta, Mahanta. October 19, 2011. “South Carolina Voter ID Law: Yep, Pretty

    Discriminating.” Mother Jones.
    Shields, Todd. 2012. “Shifting Support for Democratic Party Among American Elderly.”

    Blair Center – Clinton School Poll. http://blairrockefellerpoll.uark.edu/5292.php

    (accessed February 8, 2013)

    Smith, Rogers. 1999. Civic Ideals: Conflicting Visions of Citizenship in U.S. History.

    New Haven: Yale University Press.

    Soss, Joe. 2000. Unwanted Claims: The Politics of Participation in the US Welfare

    System. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

    Soss, Joe, Sanford Schram, Thomas Vartanian, Erin O’Brien. 2001. “Setting the Terms

    of Relief: Explaining State Policy Choices in the Devolution Revolution.”

    American Journal of Political Science. 45(2): 378-395.

    Soss, Joe, Richard Fording, and Sanford Schram. 2011. Disciplining the Poor:

    Neoliberalism and the Persistent Power of Race. Chicago, IL: University of

    Chicago Press.

    42

    Spakovsky, Hans von. August 6, 2011. “Voter ID is a Sensible Precaution.” Heritage

    Foundation. http://www.heritage.org/research/commentary/2011/08/voter-id-is-a-

    sensible-precaution?query=Voter+ID+is+a+Sensible+Precaution

    Stewart, Charles. 2011 (Summer). “Adding Up the Costs and Benefits of Voting by

    Mail.” Election Law Journal. 10(3): 297-301.

    Stephan, Alfred and Juan Linz. 2011. “Comparative Perspectives on Inequality and the

    Quality of Democracy in the United States.” Perspectives on Politics 9.4: 841-56.

    Stone, Deborah. 2002. Policy Paradox: The Art of Political Decision Making. New

    York: W.W. Norton & Company.

    Stream, Christopher. 1999. “Health Reform in the States: A Model of State Small Group

    Health Insurance Market Reforms”. Political Research Quarterly. 52(3): 499-526

    Streb, Matthew J. 2012. Law and Election Politics The Rules of the Game. Routledge.!

    Teixeira, Mark. 1987. Why Americans Don’t Vote: Turnout Decline in the United States.

    Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.!

    Timberg, Craig and Lonnae O’Neal Parker. “Black electorate responds mightily to

    perceived voter-intimidation efforts.” The Washington Post 7 Nov. 2012.

    Accessed: 5 Feb.

    2013.http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/decision2012/black-electorate-

    responds-mightily-to-perceived-voter-intimidation-efforts/2012/11/07/d7596304-

    2900-11e2-b4e0-346287b7e56c_story.html

    True, James, Bryan Jones, and Frank Baumgartner. 2007. “Punctuated-Equilibrium

    Theory: Explaining Stability and Change in Policy Making.” In Theories of the

    Policy Process. Paul Sabatier, ed. Westview Press. 155-188.

    Tuck, Stephen. 2009. “Reversal of Black Voting Rights after Reconstruction.” In

    Desmond King, Robert C. Lieberman, Gretchen Ritter, and Laurence Whitehead,

    eds. 2009. Democratization in America: A Comparative-Historical Analysis.

    Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press

    Uggen, Christopher, Sarah Shannon, and Jeff Manza. 2012(July). State Level Estimates

    of Felon Disenfranchisement in the United States, 2010. The Sentencing Project.

    Washington, D.C.

    Underwood, Julie and Julie Mead. 2012(March). “A Smart ALEC Threatens Public

    Education.” Kappan Magazine. 93(6): 51-55.

    Valelly, Richard M. 2004. The Two Reconstructions The Struggle for Black

    Enfranchisement. Chicago: University of Chicago Press

    Verba, Sidney and Norman Nie. 1972. Participation in America. New York: Harper

    and Row.

    _____, Kay Lehman Schlozman, Henry Brady. 1995. Voice and Equality: Civic

    Voluntarism in American Politics. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

    Waldman, Michael and Justin Levitt. March 29, 2007. “The Myth of Voter Fraud.” The

    Washington Post.

    Wang, Tova A. 2012. The Politics of Voter Suppression: Defending and Expanding

    Americans’ Right to Vote. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.

    Weaver, Velsa M. 2007. “Frontlash: Race and the Development of Punitive Crime

    Policy.” Studies in American Political Development. 21: 230-265.

    Weiser, Wendy and Lawrence Norden. 2011. “Voting Law Changes in 2012.” Brennan

    Center for Justice. NYU School of Law. 1-58.

    43

    _____. 2011. “Appendix: Summary of State Laws and Bills.”

    Brennan Center for Justice. NYU School of Law. 1-59.

    Weiser, Wendy and Diana Kasdan. 2012. “Voting Law Changes: Election Update.”

    Brennan Center for Justice. NYU School of Law. 1-41.

    Weimer, David and Aidan Vining. 2004. Policy Analysis: Concepts and Practice.

    Prentice Hall.

    Wirzbicki, Alan. “Restrictive voting laws inspire minority backlash.” The Boston Globe

    29 Sept. 2012. Accessed: 5 Feb. 2013.

    http://www.bostonglobe.com/news/nation/2012/09/28/ohio-voter-suppression-

    efforts-may-galvanizing-african-american-

    voters/wEaaMnxD2fFhm87Pkp5t4M/story.html

    Wooldridge, Jeffrey M. 2001. Econometric Analysis of Cross Section and Panel Data.

    Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

    Wright, Gerald C., and Brian F. Schaffner. 2002. “The Influence of Party: Evidence from

    the State Legislatures.” American Political Science Review. 96(2): 367-379.

    Yost, Pete. March 12, 2012. “Texas Voter ID Law Blocked by Justice Department.”

    The Huffington Post. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/12/texas-voter-id-

    justice-department_n_1339004.html (download date March 24, 2012)

    i
    Keyssar 2000, 43.

    ii
    Wang 2012; Keyssar 2009.

    iii
    Wang 2012; Valelly 2004.

    iv
    These specific types of policies have been considered and adopted at the state level

    with the most frequency in recent years. This assessment is based upon various reports

    that review state legislative activity in this policy area: National Conference of State

    Legislatures’ Database of Election Reform Legislation and the Brennan Center for

    Justice’s Voting Law Changes in 2012 by Weiser & Norden 2011.
    v
    Stewart 2011; Cain, Donovan, and Tolbert 2008; Fortier 2006; Gronke, Galanes-

    Rosenbaum, and Miller 2008; also see Burden et al. 2009.
    vi

    Peters 1999.
    vii

    Karch 2007; Mooney 2011; Stream 1999; Brooks 2007.
    viii

    Berman 2011; Cooper 2011; Davenport 2011.
    ix

    Smith 1999; King et al. 2009; Tuck 2009
    x
    Soss, Fording, and Schram 2011.

    xi
    See Stephan and Linz 2011 for fruitful discussion of the need for a comparative lens in

    examining American political development.
    xii

    Schedler 2002, 2006; Levitsky and Way 2010.
    xiii

    King, Lieberman, Ritter, and Whitehead 2009; see Stephan and Linz 2011.
    xiv

    Smith 1999.
    xv

    Jacobs and King 2009.
    xvi

    Mahanta 2011; Jealous 2011; American Association of Retired People 2012.
    xvii

    Berman 2011, 43.
    xviii

    Maddow 2011a, 2011b, 2011c, 2011d; Sharpton 2011a, 2011b, 2012; Martin 2012;

    AARP 2012; Dilday 2011; Greenwald 2011.
    xix

    Seitz-Wald 2012.

    44

    xxhttp://www.judiciary.senate.gov/hearings/hearing.cfm?id=2072649339b2bb3b19d320ce

    62f6c1b8 (download date March 24, 2012)
    xxi

    Burke 2012; also http://www.c-spanvideo.org/appearance/600750999 (download date

    March 24, 2012).
    xxii

    Isreal 2012; Yost 2012.
    xxiii

    Fund and von Spakovsky 2012; Fund 2008: 7, 12; Hawkins 2012; Bloom 2012;

    Brown 2012.
    xxiv

    Fund and von Spakovsky 2012.
    xxv

    Fund and von Spakovsky 2012, 9.
    xxvi

    Sabato and Simpson 1996 cited in Fund 2008, 10.
    xxvii

    Meyers and Walter 2011.
    xxviii

    See Kellogg 2012 for more complete review with emphasis on Article 5.

    http://www.dcbar.org/for_lawyers/resources/publications/washington_lawyer/september_

    2012/vote.cfm (download date May 25, 2013)
    xxix

    e.g. Piven & Cloward 2000; Piven, Minnite, Groarke 2009; Wang 2012.
    xxx

    Wang 2012.
    xxxi

    Piven, Minnite, Groarke 2009 and Minnite 2010.
    xxxii

    Minnite 2010, 88-89.
    xxxiii

    Piven, Minnite, Groarke 2009, 11, 21, 164; Frymer 1999, 6; Keyssar 2011.
    xxxiv

    Piven, Minnite and Groarke 2009, 16.
    xxxv

    Shefter 1984; Piven and Cloward 1988; Keyssar 2011, 2012; Overton 2007.
    xxxvi

    Key 1949; Schattschneider 1942, 1960, 59, 95; Rosenstone and Hansen 1993.
    xxxvii

    Keyssar 2012, 2009; Piven and Cloward 1988.
    xxxviii

    Piven, Minnite, Groarke 2009; Cohen 2009.
    xxxix

    Piven and Cloward 1988; Piven, Minnite, Groarke 2009.
    xl

    Shefter 1984.
    xli

    Wang 2012.
    xlii

    Wang 2012.
    xliii

    Wang 2012; Piven, Minnite, Groarke 2009; Hasen 2012.
    xliv

    Piven et al 2009, 20, 11.
    xlv

    This timeframe is advantageous as it captures a period during which the rate of

    introduction of this legislation increased. In addition, this period brackets the 2008

    election allowing potential prospective or retrospective responses to this election to be

    captured.
    xlvi

    Kingdon 2002.
    xlvii

    Weimer and Vining 2004; Mayhew 1974.
    xlviii

    Stone 2002; Edelman 1964, 1988; Glassner 1999.
    xlix

    Jacobs 1992; True, Jones, and Baumgartner 2007.
    l
    Fund 2008: 3; Hasen 2012.

    li
    e.g. Weiser and Norden 2011.

    lii
    Jenkins 2008; Battista 2011; Battista and Richman 2011; Wright and Schaffner 2002.

    liii
    There are many versions of the Ranney index most of which include the party of the

    governor and are operationalized differently. We use the simplified version above,

    following Berkowitz & Clay 2011, in order to focus specifically on competitiveness

    within the state legislature.

    45

    liv

    A quick note on the Nebraskan legislature, which is officially nonpartisan and

    unicameral, and is usually dropped from such analyses. While Nebraska state senators do

    not have official party affiliations most are endorsed by, register with, and have unofficial

    affiliation with either the Nebraska Democratic or Republican parties. We use various

    editions of the Nebraska Blue Book to identify the party with which each legislator is

    affiliated. We use this data to construct the % Republican variable and an adjusted

    version of the Ranney Index that accommodates the unicameral nature of this legislature.
    lv

    Teixeira 1987; Brady and McNulty 2011.
    lvi

    Cain, Donovan, and Tolbert 2008; Verba, Schlozman and Brady 1995; Piven and

    Cloward 1988; Rosenstone and Wolfinger 1978; Verba and Nie 1972.
    lvii

    Keyssar 2012.
    lviii

    The Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey is the best available survey that

    allows for state-level estimates of voting behavior overtime. Sample sizes for some states

    are too small to produce reliable individual estimates for African Americans, Hispanics,

    and other racial and ethnic groups respectively by state. Hence, we measure aggregate

    minority turnout as a percentage of the state’s total electoral turnout. This captures the

    relative differences to whites and the notion of white electoral threat central to the logic

    behind minority voter suppression.
    lix

    Avery and Peffley 2005.
    lx

    Fenton 1979.
    lxi

    Piven, Minnite, and Groarke 2009; Musgrove 2012.
    lxii

    Gimpel 2010; Judis and Texiera 2002; Campbell 2008; Green, Palmquist, and

    Schickler 2002.
    lxiii

    Shields 2010.
    lxiv

    Fund and von Spakovsky 2012; Fund 2008.
    lxv

    Dreier and Martin 2010.
    lxvi

    Campbell 2006; Gumbel 2005. Dreier and Martin 2010.
    lxvii

    Waldman and Levitt 2007; Minnite 2010.
    lxviii

    American Center for Voting Rights 2005.
    lxix

    Minnite 2010, 159-200.
    lxx

    Underwood and Mead 2012.
    lxxi

    We constructed this estimate of the percentage of ALEC-affiliated legislators using

    information provided by the Center for Media and Democracy’s ALEC Exposed project.

    This project catalogs individual state legislators that have been members of ALEC, have

    been reported to be members, or have received awards from ALEC. Most commonly,

    membership is ascertained based on ALEC’s own materials or from the biographies of

    individual legislators. As there is no publicly available comprehensive list of members, we

    cannot evaluate the reliability of this measure that we know is based on a partial list of

    members. Any evaluation of the impact of this measure should bear this caveat.
    lxxii

    Berry, Ringquist, Fording, and Hanson 1998.
    lxxiii

    Berry and Berry 1990; Mooney and Lee 1995; Mintrom 1997; Karch 2007; Boehmke

    and Winter 2004.
    lxxiv

    Nice 1994.
    lxxv

    In nearly all cases this count corresponds to the number of bills proposed or passed,

    but in a handful of instances a single bill contained multiple significant restrictions to

    46

    different aspects of the voting process. While our dependent variables provide a count of

    the number of proposed or passed restrictive changes, not the number of bills, in practice

    these two slightly different measures are very highly correlated.
    lxxvi

    http://www.ncsl.org/legislatures-elections/elections/2001-2010-database-of-election-

    reform-legislation.aspx (Download date March 12, 2012)
    lxxvii

    Weiser & Norden 2011.
    lxxviii

    However, if such a bill were passed it would not be included among our passed bills

    unless it required a photo identification.
    lxxix

    Although, it is worth noting that in both Florida and Iowa previous executive orders

    that made it easier for felons to restore their right to vote were reversed by Republican

    Governors, both of whom were elected in 2010.
    lxxx

    For example, these approaches are appropriate for situations where the dependent

    variable takes the form of a count, which in our case ranges from 0 to 3 legislative

    changes passed and 0 to 22 legislative changes proposed in any year. While Poisson

    regression is used in situations where a count dependent variable is examined across, for

    example, a set of states in a single year, pooled Poisson approaches are appropriate when

    count outcomes are observed in the context of a cross-sectional time series, that is, across

    states, but also over time.
    lxxxi

    Specifically, this variable is related to the unobserved panel level component of the

    model.
    lxxxii

    Mundlak 1978; Wooldridge 2001.
    lxxxiii

    In addition, the GMM approach does not assume strict exogeneity.
    lxxxiv

    There are 49 states observed over this 6-year period; consequently all of these

    models are based on a set of 294 state-year observations. Hawaii was identified as an

    unduly influential outlier and dropped from all models. It was dropped for the same

    reason in the examination of legislation passed in 2011 that is forthcoming.
    lxxxv

    In addition, within these models we use cluster robust standard errors in order to

    control for the effects of both overdispersion and the correlation that arises naturally from

    repeated observations on the same state over time. The use of cluster robust standard

    errors substantially increases the standard errors of the estimates, correspondingly

    reduces t-statistics, and thus markedly raises the threshold for achieving statistical

    significance. The use of such standard errors is appropriate for these analyses. We only

    mention this here to stress that the results below represent a set of very conservative tests

    of the predictors of passed legislation. While such an approach unavoidably reduces the

    number of factors that will achieve statistical significance, the tradeoff is that we can

    have strong confidence in significance of the few factors that meet this stringent test.
    lxxxvi

    We initially attempted to model such a conditional effect using a series of

    interactions. High collinearity between the component variables and the interaction

    effects in the context of the small N in these analyses made this approach unwieldy.
    lxxxvii

    Timberg & Parker 2012; Wirzbicki 2012.
    lxxxviii

    We recognize that some may view these associations as reflective of a necessary

    respond to widespread voter fraud committed disproportionately by racial and ethnic

    minorities. While there is literally no evidence to support such claims, right-wing

    narratives about voter fraud are often highly racial in nature. For example, one prominent

    conspiracy theory attributes President Obama’s electoral victory in 2008 to a massive

    47

    voter fraud campaign orchestrated by the Obama campaign, the Democratic Party, and

    ACORN. While such conspiratorial beliefs may motivate some legislators, we

    categorically reject such narratives as a plausible explanation for these legislative

    developments overall.
    lxxxix

    Levitt 2007; Waldman & Levitt 2007; Minnite 2010.
    xc

    Weiser and Kasdan 2012.
    xci

    Weiser & Kasdan 2012.
    xcii

    see Streb 2012 for a review.
    xciii

    Streb 2012, 105.
    xciv

    Powers & Damron 2013.
    xcv

    Herron & Smith 2012; Herron & Smith forthcoming.
    xcvi

    Piven & Cloward 2000; Wang 2012; Hasen 2012.
    xcvii

    Bullock & Gaddie 2009.
    xcviii

    Dougherty 2009; Bullock & Gaddie 2009; Frey 2012.
    xcix

    Bullock & Gaddie 2009, 367.
    c
    Weaver 2007.

    ci
    Weaver 2007, 236.

    cii
    Weaver 2007, 238.

    ciii
    Hacker & Pierson 2011; McCarty et al. 2008.

    civ
    Minnite 2012, 90.

    cv
    Soss, Schram, and Fording 2011; Katzenstein et al. 2010; Beckett and Western 2001.

    cvi
    Uggen, Shannon, and Manza 2012. See Katzenstein et al. 2010

    cvii
    Uggen, Shannon, and Manza 2012.

    cviii
    Bartels 2012.

    cix
    Greenberg et al. 1996; Soss, Fording, Schram 2011.

    cx
    Bentele and Nicoli 2012; Soss, Fording, Schram 2011; Soss, Schram, Vartanian, and

    O’Brien 2001; Noble 1997.
    cxi

    Soss, Fording, Schram 2011.
    cxii

    Soss 2000; Schneider and Ingram 1993; Mettler and Soss 2004; O’Brien 2009.
    cxiii

    Soss, Fording, Schram 2011, 16. See Isaac 2012.
    cxiv

    Katzenstein et al. 2010.
    cxv

    Moreno and Riccardi 2013.
    cxvi

    For a detailing of recent efforts see Hauser 2013.

    Appendix A. Definitions and Data Sources

    Variable Definition Source

    Dependent Variables

    Proposed Voter Restriction The number of restrictive changes to voter access in proposed legislation in each year. National Conference of State Legislatures’s Database of Election Reform

    Legislation Legislation 2006-2010 & The Brennan Center for Justice 2011

    Passed Voter Restriction The number of restrictive changes to voter access in passed legislation in each year. Ibid.

    Legislation

    Independent Variables

    Political Control & Competition

    Average of % Republican in each chamber of the state Statistical Abstract of the U.S.*

    Republican Governor Dummy variable indicating presence of Republican Governor. Statistical Abstract of the U.S.

    Divided State Government Dummy variable indicating a state has a divided government. Statistical Abstract of the U.S.*

    Difference in Party Vote Share in Difference in state vote share between the Republican and Statistical Abstract of the U.S.

    Previous Presidential Election Democratic parties in the previous presidential election.

    State Party Competition A simplified version of the Ranney index containing only partisan Statistical Abstract of the U.S.*

    seat shares: 100 – (abs[(% Democrats in upper house) +

    (% Democrats in lower house – 100])*

    Voter Behavior & Suppression

    Minority Turnout in Previous [{(citizen vote total by state) – (white citizen vote total by state)} / citizen vote total by state] * 100 U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, Voting and

    Presidential Election Registration in the Election of November 2000, 2004, 2008

    Change in Minority Turnout between minority turnout 2004 – minority turnout 2000 U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, Voting and

    Previous Presidential Elections minority turnout 2008 – minority turnout 2004 Registration in the Election of November 2000, 2004, 2008

    Class-biased Turnout in % of upper class (individuals with family income over 75k) who voted in respective previous Presidential United States Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey,

    Previous Presidential Election election year / by the % of the lower class (individuals with family income under federal poverty line) who Voter Supplement File for 2000, 2004, 2008

    did so, multiplied by 100. Higher values indicate more upper-class bias (Avery and Peffley 2004: 53, 62).

    Change in Class-biased Turnout Class-bias turnout (CBT)2004 – CBT2000 United States Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey,

    b/w Previous Presidential Elections CBT2008 – CBT2004 Voter Supplement File for 2000, 2004, 2008

    Total State Turnout in VEP (vote for highest office rates) in 2000, 2004, and 2008 Michael P. McDonald. 2012. “Presidential Voter Turnout Rates,

    Previous Presidential Election 1948-2008. United States Elections Project. October 2011.

    Perceptions of Voter Fraud

    Reported Cases of Voter Fraud Count of all allegations of voter fraud formally brought in the 2004 Election Cycle Lorraine Minnite’s (2010: 159-200) complete description of voter fraud in 2004;

    American Center for Voting Rights compiled the original allegations filed

    % of ALEC-affiliated State Percentage of state legislators who either identify or have been identified as The Center for Media and Democracy’s ALEC

    Legislators members or affiliates of the American Legislative Exchange Council. Exposed project

    Liberal Citizen Ideology Based on interest groups’ ratings of Congresspersons and Berry et al. (1998) & Richard Fording

    their vote shares. See Berry et al. (1998) for details.

    Demographic

    % African-American Number of African-Americans divided by total population U.S. Census Bureau Population Estimates

    % Non-citizens Number of non-citizens divided by total population U.S. Census Bureau Population Estimates

    % Over 65 Number of state residents 65 years and older divided by total population U.S. Census Bureau Population Estimates

    Policy Diffusion This variable is the total count of restrictive voter access legislation passed or proposed in contiguous

    states in the previous year.

    Previous Relevant Policy & Control Variables

    Per capita Revenue Total real state revenue divided by total population U.S. Census Bureau

    (2008$)

    Already Passed a Photo ID or Proof of This variable takes a value of 1 if a state has already pass a photo identification or a proof of citizenship National Conference of State Legislatures

    Citizenship Requirement requirement, and takes a value of 2 if a state has passed both.

    No-excuse and/or Early Voting currently If a state offers early voting this variable takes a value of 1, if the states offers early voting and no-excuse National Conference of State Legislatures

    avaliable absentee voting then this variable takes a value of 2.

    *Except Nebraska

    % of State Legislature Republican

    legislature*.

    !
    !
    !
    !
    !

    !
    !
    !
    !
    !
    !
    !
    !
    !
    !
    !
    !
    !
    !

    Table 1: States Passing Voter Restriction Laws, 2006-2011!
    Type of Law! 2006! 2007! 2008! 2009! 2010! 2011!

    Photo ID
    Required!

    Missouri! None! None ! Oklahoma*! Idaho

    !

    Alabama,
    Kansas,
    Mississippi
    South
    Carolina,
    Tennessee,
    Texas,
    Wisconsin!

    Proof of
    Citizenship
    Required!

    None! None! None! Georgia! None! Alabama,
    Kansas,
    Tennessee!

    Registration
    Restrictions!

    California,
    Missouri,
    Ohio,
    Kentucky,
    New
    Hampshire!

    North
    Carolina
    Florida!

    None! None! None! Florida,
    Illinois,
    Maine,
    Ohio,
    Texas (2),
    Wisconsin!

    Absentee &
    Early Voting
    Restrictions!

    Alaska,
    Virginia!

    Maine,
    New
    Mexico
    (2)

    None! Utah,
    Arkansas!

    None! Florida,
    Georgia,
    Ohio,
    Tennessee
    West
    Virginia!

    Felon
    Restrictions!

    None! None! None ! None! None! None!

    Shading indicates states where the Democratic Party held a majority of seats in
    the state legislature in that year.
    *Oklahoma voters may present a voter identification card (without a photo) in lieu
    of a photo id. This is the only exception and most voters present photo id in
    practice.

    Table 2. GMM Analysis of Total Annual Proposed State Voter Restrictions: 2006-2011

    Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4

    All Proposed ID & Proof Registration, Early, &

    Partisan Control Legislation of Citizenship Absentee Restrictions
    % of State Legislature Republican 1.356 1.148 1.732 -0.138

    Instrument Variable (1.125) (1.048) (1.955) (1.346)

    Divided State Government 0.128 0.166 0.281 0.283

    Electoral Competition (0.194) (0.202) (0.304) (0.271)

    State Party Competition -0.008 -0.011 -0.013 0.004

    (0.011) (0.010) (0.017) (0.010)

    Difference in Party Vote Share in -0.009 -0.008 -0.010 -0.028*

    Previous Presidential Election (0.014) (0.013) (0.020) (0.013)

    Voter Behavior & Voter Suppression

    Minority Turnout in Previous 5.37*** 6.66*** 1.41

    Presidential Election (1.12) (1.45) (0.99)

    Change in Minority Turnout between 0.130*** 0.103*** 0.073 0.103**

    Previous Presidential Elections (0.032) (0.029) (0.045) (0.033)

    Class-biased Turnout in -0.005 -0.003 -0.000 -0.012*

    Previous Presidential Election (0.008) (0.007) (0.008) (0.006)

    Change in Class-biased Turnout 0.011** 0.011** 0.011* 0.014***

    between Previous Presidential Elections (0.004) (0.004) (0.005) (0.004)

    Total State Turnout in 0.001 0.007 0.001 -0.014

    Previous Presidential Election (0.020) (0.021) (0.022) (0.023)

    Demographic
    % African American 4.46***

    (1.08)

    % Non-citizens 0.082** 0.072* 0.061^ 0.095**

    (0.028) (0.029) (0.043) (0.023)

    % Over 65 -0.039 -0.011 -0.059 -0.033

    (0.078) (0.076) (0.099) (0.080)

    Incidence & Perceptions of Electoral Fraud

    Reported Cases of Voter Fraud 0.049 0.058 0.079^ 0.006

    (0.037) (0.041) (0.043) (0.056)

    Policy Diffusion

    Total passed similar legislation 0.099 0.119 -0.038 -0.028

    in contiguous states (t-1) (0.112) (0.113) (0.218) (0.171)

    Previous Relevant Policy & Control Variables

    Already Passed a Photo ID or -1.237** -1.142** -2.364***

    Proof of Citizenship Requirement (0.371) (0.351) (0.564)

    No-excuse Absentee and/or -0.187^ -0.231* -0.205

    Early voting currently avaliable (0.106) (0.107) (0.152)

    Per Capita State Revenue -0.034 -0.039 -0.069 -0.031

    (0.044) (0.044) (0.043) (0.043)

    Constant 1.38 0.52 0.40 1.44

    (2.97) (2.99) (4.72) (2.75)

    N 294 294 294 294

    ^p < .1 * p < .05 **p < .01 ***p < .001

    Table 3. Pooled Fixed Effects Poisson Analysis of Total

    Annual Passed State Voter Restrictions: 2006-2011

    Model 1 Model 2

    Partisan Control
    % of State Legislature Republican 15.08** 31.08***

    (5.34) (6.13)

    Presense of Republican Governor 1.94** 2.58***

    (0.71)

    (0.71)

    Divided State Government -0.36 -0.069

    (2.09) (1.71)

    Electoral Competition

    State Party Competition -0.061* -0.057*

    (0.024) (0.028)

    Difference in Party Vote Share in -0.039 0.563*

    Previous Presidential Election (0.067) (0.245)

    Difference in Party Vote Share X % of -1.069*

    Legislature Republican (0.419)

    Voter Behavior & Voter Suppression
    Minority Turnout in Previous 92.68^ 143.7**

    Presidential Election (52.94) (52.42)

    Change in Minority Turnout between -0.215 -0.326

    Previous Presidential Elections (0.17) (0.267)

    Class-biased Turnout in 0.048 0.085

    Previous Presidential Election (0.049) (0.058)

    Change in Class-biased Turnout -0.013 -0.018

    between Previous Presidential Elections (0.030) (0.030)

    Total State Turnout in -0.329^ -0.324^

    Previous Presidential Election (0.187) (0.187)

    Demographic
    % African American 145.9 382.8

    (281.9) (279.1)

    % Non-citizens 2.04 2.61

    (1.11) (1.83)

    % Over 65 -1.59 -2.48*

    (1.00) (0.97)

    Perceptions of Electoral Fraud
    % of ALEC-affiliated State 4.14 -2.74

    Legislators (5.99) (6.20)

    Policy Diffusion
    Total passed legislation -0.554 -0.662

    in contiguous states (t-1) (0.342) (0.425)

    Previous Relevant Policy & Control Variables

    Already Passed a Photo ID or -3.50 -2.96

    Proof of Citizenship Requirement (3.97) (2.28)

    No-excuse Absentee and/or 17.67*** 16.38***

    Early voting currently avaliable (2.61) (2.57)

    Per Capita State Revenue 17.67 -0.073

    (2.61) (0.225)

    Log likelihood -35.01 -31.51

    N 150 150

    ^p < .1 * p < .05 **p < .01 ***p < .001

    Table 4. Poisson Analysis of Count State Voter Restrictions

    Passed in 2011

    Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4

    Partisan Control

    % of State Legislature Republican -0.43

    (1.98)

    Precense of Republican Governor 1.98**

    (0.71)

    Divided State Government -1.18

    (0.91)

    Unencumbered Republican Majority 2.69*** 7.29*** 8.64***

    Electoral Competition (0.72) (1.72) (2.42)

    State Party Competition 0.016 0.017

    (0.024) (0.024)

    Potential Swing State in 2010 0.005 -4.01**

    (0.704) (1.33)

    Potential Swing State X Unencumbered 4.54*

    Republican Majority (2.28)

    Voter Behavior & Voter Suppression

    Minority Turnout in 2008 Presidential 24.43***

    Election (3.24)

    Change in Minority Turnout between -0.418* -0.05 -0.564*

    Previous Presidential Elections (0.184) (0.15) (0.234)

    Class-biased Turnout in -0.025 -0.014 0.012

    2008 Presidential Election (0.054) (0.013) (0.041)

    Change in Class-biased Turnout 0.041** 0.003 0.022

    between Previous Presidential Elections (0.015) (0.013) (0.015)

    Total State Turnout in -0.308* -0.232*

    2008 Presidential Election (0.143) (0.042) (0.106)

    Demographic

    % African American 28.99***

    (7.01)

    % Non-citizens -0.347* -0.168

    (0.143) (0.106)

    % Over 65 -0.198 -0.306*

    (0.176) (0.155)

    Incidence & Perceptions of Electoral Fraud

    Reported Cases of Voter Fraud 0.334* 0.329*

    (0.151) (0.144)

    % of ALEC-affiliated State 0.205 -0.692

    Legislators (5.19) (4.69)

    Liberal Citizen Ideology 0.120^ 0.097

    (0.064) (0.065)

    Previous Relevant Policy & Control Variables

    Already Passed a Photo ID or -1.01^ -1.17^ -2.74*** -3.05***

    Proof of Citizenship Requirement (0.59) (0.65) (0.68) (0.70)

    No-excuse Absentee and/or -0.03 -0.05 2.49*** 2.82**

    Early voting currently avaliable (0.23) (0.22) (0.70) (1.00)

    Per Capita State Revenue -0.41^ -0.38^ -0.83** -0.23*

    (0.23) (0.20) (0.25) (0.20)

    Constant 0.89 0.79 14.31 1.36

    (2.27) (1.34) (13.81) (10.45)

    Log likelihood -35.48 -35.11 -22.21 -20.95

    N 49 49 49 49

    ^p < .1 * p < .05 **p < .01 ***p < .001

      University of Massachusetts Boston
      ScholarWorks at UMass Boston
      12-2013
      Jim Crow 2.0?: Why States Consider and Adopt Restrictive Voter Access Policies
      Keith Gunnar Bentele
      Erin E. O’Brien
      Recommended Citation

    • Jim Crow 2_0 -June 7 Title Page

    What Will You Get?

    We provide professional writing services to help you score straight A’s by submitting custom written assignments that mirror your guidelines.

    Premium Quality

    Get result-oriented writing and never worry about grades anymore. We follow the highest quality standards to make sure that you get perfect assignments.

    Experienced Writers

    Our writers have experience in dealing with papers of every educational level. You can surely rely on the expertise of our qualified professionals.

    On-Time Delivery

    Your deadline is our threshold for success and we take it very seriously. We make sure you receive your papers before your predefined time.

    24/7 Customer Support

    Someone from our customer support team is always here to respond to your questions. So, hit us up if you have got any ambiguity or concern.

    Complete Confidentiality

    Sit back and relax while we help you out with writing your papers. We have an ultimate policy for keeping your personal and order-related details a secret.

    Authentic Sources

    We assure you that your document will be thoroughly checked for plagiarism and grammatical errors as we use highly authentic and licit sources.

    Moneyback Guarantee

    Still reluctant about placing an order? Our 100% Moneyback Guarantee backs you up on rare occasions where you aren’t satisfied with the writing.

    Order Tracking

    You don’t have to wait for an update for hours; you can track the progress of your order any time you want. We share the status after each step.

    image

    Areas of Expertise

    Although you can leverage our expertise for any writing task, we have a knack for creating flawless papers for the following document types.

    Areas of Expertise

    Although you can leverage our expertise for any writing task, we have a knack for creating flawless papers for the following document types.

    image

    Trusted Partner of 9650+ Students for Writing

    From brainstorming your paper's outline to perfecting its grammar, we perform every step carefully to make your paper worthy of A grade.

    Preferred Writer

    Hire your preferred writer anytime. Simply specify if you want your preferred expert to write your paper and we’ll make that happen.

    Grammar Check Report

    Get an elaborate and authentic grammar check report with your work to have the grammar goodness sealed in your document.

    One Page Summary

    You can purchase this feature if you want our writers to sum up your paper in the form of a concise and well-articulated summary.

    Plagiarism Report

    You don’t have to worry about plagiarism anymore. Get a plagiarism report to certify the uniqueness of your work.

    Free Features $66FREE

    • Most Qualified Writer $10FREE
    • Plagiarism Scan Report $10FREE
    • Unlimited Revisions $08FREE
    • Paper Formatting $05FREE
    • Cover Page $05FREE
    • Referencing & Bibliography $10FREE
    • Dedicated User Area $08FREE
    • 24/7 Order Tracking $05FREE
    • Periodic Email Alerts $05FREE
    image

    Our Services

    Join us for the best experience while seeking writing assistance in your college life. A good grade is all you need to boost up your academic excellence and we are all about it.

    • On-time Delivery
    • 24/7 Order Tracking
    • Access to Authentic Sources
    Academic Writing

    We create perfect papers according to the guidelines.

    Professional Editing

    We seamlessly edit out errors from your papers.

    Thorough Proofreading

    We thoroughly read your final draft to identify errors.

    image

    Delegate Your Challenging Writing Tasks to Experienced Professionals

    Work with ultimate peace of mind because we ensure that your academic work is our responsibility and your grades are a top concern for us!

    Check Out Our Sample Work

    Dedication. Quality. Commitment. Punctuality

    Categories
    All samples
    Essay (any type)
    Essay (any type)
    The Value of a Nursing Degree
    Undergrad. (yrs 3-4)
    Nursing
    2
    View this sample

    It May Not Be Much, but It’s Honest Work!

    Here is what we have achieved so far. These numbers are evidence that we go the extra mile to make your college journey successful.

    0+

    Happy Clients

    0+

    Words Written This Week

    0+

    Ongoing Orders

    0%

    Customer Satisfaction Rate
    image

    Process as Fine as Brewed Coffee

    We have the most intuitive and minimalistic process so that you can easily place an order. Just follow a few steps to unlock success.

    See How We Helped 9000+ Students Achieve Success

    image

    We Analyze Your Problem and Offer Customized Writing

    We understand your guidelines first before delivering any writing service. You can discuss your writing needs and we will have them evaluated by our dedicated team.

    • Clear elicitation of your requirements.
    • Customized writing as per your needs.

    We Mirror Your Guidelines to Deliver Quality Services

    We write your papers in a standardized way. We complete your work in such a way that it turns out to be a perfect description of your guidelines.

    • Proactive analysis of your writing.
    • Active communication to understand requirements.
    image
    image

    We Handle Your Writing Tasks to Ensure Excellent Grades

    We promise you excellent grades and academic excellence that you always longed for. Our writers stay in touch with you via email.

    • Thorough research and analysis for every order.
    • Deliverance of reliable writing service to improve your grades.
    Place an Order Start Chat Now
    image

    Order your essay today and save 30% with the discount code Happy