Voter suppression bills are once again making their way through the state legislature.
The justification — or lack thereof as the case may be — for these bills lies with the unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud made during the 2020 election.
Legislation like these could be warranted if they were being passed to increase election security. But they’re not. Recent elections in Kansas have been as safe and secure as they have ever been.
Hundreds of post-election audits have been conducted across the state since 2020, and not a single failure has been uncovered.
Republican Secretary of State Scott Schwab has been an outspoken critic of measures that would restrict the state’s ability to collect ballots from voters, causing a rift between top Republican officials in Kansas.
But ever since 2020, questioning election integrity has become a political dog whistle in state houses across the country.
A majority of Kansans don’t seem to be buying it.
The 2022 Kansas Speaks public opinion survey conducted by the Docking Institute of Public Affairs at Fort Hays State University last fall asked questions about perceptions of voter fraud and election integrity in our state.
The survey found that only 11% of respondents thought fraudulent voting decides elections in our state and about the same number (12%) thought state and local officials commit election fraud to alter outcomes.
These results suggest that even if Kansans possibly believe one-off incidents of voter fraud are common — there is little evidence to support this, only a handful of cases have been found in the past decade — they do not believe there widespread systemic fraud that alters election results
Despite little popular support, state legislators are perpetuating these false claims by introducing legislation that restricts voters’ ability to cast a ballot.
Senate Bill 208 would modify state law on use of ballot drop boxes. In its original form, it would have limited each county to a single dropbox — severely impractical for the state’s largest counties like Johnson and Sedgwick.
SB 208 was then amended to eliminate the use of ballot drop boxes altogether, despite no reported problems with their usage.
In the Kansas Speaks survey, less than one-third of Kansas voters thought ballot drop boxes should be banned.
Senate Bill 209 eliminates the current three day grace period for accepting mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day.