The Democrats’ Empty Threats of Oppression
New Hollywood Is Dead, Long Live Old Hollywood
Make America America Again
Election 2026: California Republicans Have a Chance
Should Race Realism Be Suppressed? The New York Times Thinks So
Stop Calling Them Democrats
Democrat Wins Show GOP Voters Aren't Motivated
Appeasement Has Failed: Britain Must Finally Proscribe the IRGC and Close Iran's Embassy
Negotiating Greenland from Denmark is Merely Deja Vu. The U.S. Took the Virgin...
Co-Creator of Dark Web Site 'Empire Market' Admits Role in $430M Illegal Marketplace
Soros Funded Nonprofit Doxxes Agents Involved in Alex Pretti Shooting
Detransitioner’s $2M Court Win Puts Medical Establishment on Notice
There's a Main Character Syndrome Pandemic on the Left
Illegal Alien Charged After Allegedly Firing Rifle on Dallas Bridge During New Year’s...
Massachusetts Auditor Uncovers $4.8 Million in Benefit Fraud in 2025's Fourth Quarter
Tipsheet
Premium

Poll Shows That Americans Agree It's 'Too Easy' to Exercise One of Their Rights

AP Photo/Ben Gray, File

Democrats in more than a few states are working overtime to stop the implementation of common-sense voting laws, especially with regard to voter identification requirements. Democratic lawmakers maintain that "voter suppression" is a pressing issue that is perpetuated by identification mandates at the ballot box. Meanwhile, a new poll shows that Americans are not buying Democrats' bogus narrative.

A fresh Morning Consult poll found that 44 percent of Americans believe that voting laws are not strict enough to prevent fraud and cheating at the ballot box. Via Morning Consult: 

The Sept. 17-20 survey found that 44 percent of U.S. adults believe the rules around voting are not strict enough to prevent votes from being cast illegally, a rarity in modern American elections, compared with 33 percent who say the rules make it too difficult for eligible citizens to cast their ballots.

On this key question in the debate about voting rights, there is less unanimity among Democrats than among Republicans: 54 percent of Democrats say the rules around voting are too strict, compared with 79 percent of Republicans who say the rules are not tough enough.

Republican-led states, including Georgia, Arizona, and Texas, have implemented new voting laws that aim to expand voting access for eligible voters while cracking down on the potential for fraud via common-sense measures including voter identification. The Biden administration has declared war on common-sense voting laws with legal action. 

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement