With the consent decree gone, the RNC will for the first time in 35 years be free to begin anew efforts to spur purges of voter rolls and take potentially suppressive ballot security measures in the name of preventing voter fraud. No doubt RNC lawyers would advise against taking these steps, at least for a while, to forestall the DNC from running back to court seeking to have the consent decree reinstated.
But with Trump the real head of the Republican Party these days, it is quite possible he could order a national effort to combat phantom voter fraud, just like he did with his own campaign. Indeed, making false claims about Democratic and minority voter chicanery is a cornerstone of Trumps divisive agenda. Yelling voter fraud riles up the base, helps with fundraising, and can depress minority voter turnout.
The Trump era has caused voting rights activists to be extra vigilant against efforts to suppress the vote, from Trumps faux election integrity commission to the Department of Justices reversal of an Obama-era position against a particular form of voter purging in Ohio. But the removal of the consent decree could supercharge voter suppression efforts, offering Trump the opportunity to hijack the RNC and direct it toward his own efforts to explain away his 3 million voter loss in the American popular vote and rile his base against poor and minority voters.
Those seeking to protect voting rights have already had their work cut out for them in the Trump era. Things could be about to get a whole lot worse.
Paging the Boo Hoo girl
Thanks, RightGeek!
For the others, *PING*!
To accompany BooHoo girl: