FACT: Voter ID laws have no measurable negative effect on turnout.- Following Georgia’s 2021 voter ID law, the state achieved record turnout in both the 2022 and 2024 elections.
- A 2021 review by the National Bureau of Economic Research, analyzing a decade of data, determined voter ID laws “have no negative effect on registration or turnout, overall or for any group defined by race, gender, age, or party affiliation.”
- A 2014 study in the Election Law Journal found “little support for the hypothesis that notification of ID requirements depresses turnout.”
- A 2023 report by the America First Policy Institute stated voter ID laws are “not a significant cause for decreased turnout” and “do not negatively affect minority or demographic-specific turnout,” noting that several states (and entire countries) with photo ID laws actually had higher turnout than those without.
- A 2009 study in PS: Political Science & Politics concluded voter ID laws “have not had a significant impact on voting” and show “little to no effect on aggregate or individual-level turnout.”
- A 2006 study by the Crime Prevention Research Center found “[i]t is hard to see any evidence that voting regulations differentially harm either minorities, the elderly, or the poor,” and that “[r]egulations that prevent fraud are shown to actually increase the voter participation rate.”
- A 2007 analysis by the Heritage Foundation found that “voter identification requirements, such as requiring non-photo and photo identification, have virtually no suppressive effect on reported voter turnout.”
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