Voter Turnout

The Introduction of Voter Registration and Its Effect on Turnout

Date Published: 
01/01/2009
Author(s): 
Stephen Ansolabehere
David M. Konisky

Studies of voter turnout across states find that those with more facilitative registration laws have higher turnout rates. Eliminating registration barriers altogether is estimated to raise voter participation rates by up to 10%. This article presents panel estimates of the effects of introducing registration that exploits changes in registration laws and turnout within states. New York and Ohio imposed registration requirements on all of their counties in 1965 and 1977, respectively.

New Barriers to Participation: Application of New Mexico's Voter Identification Law

Working Paper No.: 
59
Date Published: 
01/01/2009
Author(s): 
Lonna Rae Atkeson
Lisa A. Bryant
Thad E. Hall
Kyle L. Saunders
R. Michael Alvarez

In democratic societies there is a tension between maximizing ballot access and minimizing voter fraud. Since the 2000 presidential election, this tension has been central to discussions about election reform, at the national and local level. We examine this tension by focusing on the implementation of voter identification laws in one state that has experienced significant issues in recent elections, and that is now implementing significant attempts at election reform: New Mexico.

Access Versus Integrity in Voter Identification Requirements

Working Paper No.: 
58
Date Published: 
02/01/2007
Author(s): 
Stephen Ansolabehere

No abstract available.

The Effect of Voter Identification Laws on Turnout

Working Paper No.: 
57
Date Published: 
01/01/2009
Author(s): 
R. Michael Alvarez
Delia Bailey
Jonathan Katz

Since the passage of the “Help America Vote Act” in 2002, nearly half of the states have adopted a variety of new identification requirements for voter registration and participation by the 2006 general election. There has been little analysis of whether these requirements reduce voter participation, especially among certain classes of voters. In this paper we document the effect of voter identification requirements on registered voters as they were imposed in states in the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections, and in the 2002 and 2006 midterm elections.

The Introduction of Voter Registration and Its Effect on Turnout

Working Paper No.: 
14
Date Published: 
01/01/2009
Author(s): 
Stephen Ansolabehere, MIT
David Konisky, MIT

Voter registration, it is widely argued, raises the costs of voting, thereby decreasing turnout. Studies of turnout across states find that states with later registration dates or election day registration have much higher turnout rates. Eliminating registration barriers altogether is estimated to raise voter participation rates by 5 to 10 percentage points. This paper presents panel estimates of the effects of the introduction of registration that exploit changes in registration law and turnout within counties.

Election Day Voter Registration in the United States: How One-Step Voting Can Change the Composition of the American Electorate

Working Paper No.: 
5
Date Published: 
01/01/2009
Author(s): 
R. Michael Alvarez, Caltech
Stephen Ansolabehere, MIT
Catherine H. Wilson, Northwestern University

For most Americans, voting requires two steps. First, an eligible citizen must register in some manner with an appropriate government agency. Second, once registered, the citizen can then cast a ballot on or before election day. The historical record provides examples of voter registration processes as early as 1801 in the state of Massachusetts, followed by Columbia, South Carolina in 1819, the state of Pennsylvania in 1836, and New York City in 1840. After the Civil War, voter registration systems proliferated throughout the nation, especially in large urban areas of the county.

Syndicate content