Political Eye
By

Jake Miller /

CBS News/ November 2, 2012, 11:04 AM

Texas voter purge marked by mistakes, misidentifications

Texas election officials erroneously purged voters from the rolls after the voters were mistakenly linked with deceased individuals who shared their names and birthdays, according to a review of records conducted by the Houston Chronicle.

Rich Parsons, a spokesman for the Texas Secretary of State, affirmed that the state was cross-referencing the its voter rolls with the Social Security Administration's death database, and that 6,491 voters have been deemed ineligible as a result.

One such voter, James Harris Jr., an African-American veteran of the U.S. Air Force who has voted in every presidential election since the Nixon era, received a letter asking him whether he was dead. He was apparently misidentified as an Arkansan man who shared his name and died in 1996.

Harris, who remains very much alive, was duly concerned, telling the Chronicle that he can't avoid the impression that "someone has gone to a concerted effort and gone to a lot of time and research coming up with this matrix...to knock people off of the voting rolls."

And Harris's experience is far from unique. The purge, which was ongoing just weeks before the presidential election, has disproportionately targeted voters in legislative districts with higher concentrations of Latino and black voters.

The Texas Secretary of State's office was quick to point out that race and ethnicity played no official role in the administration of the purge. "Neither the Official List of Registered Voters nor the Social Security Death Master File contain any racial or ethnic data, making it impossible for race or ethnicity to play any role or impact in this process," explained Parsons.

One possible explanation for the purge's more-pronounced impact on minority districts is the popularity of certain surnames that could more easily lead to a false match.

Still, some Texas lawmakers remain suspicious, demanding further assurance that voters in their district aren't being wrongly disenfranchised. "I'm obviously very alarmed and concerned about the possible disenfranchisement of someone's opportunity to vote," said State Rep. Barbara Mallory Caraway, a Dallas Democrat. "I'm concerned about the accuracy of the list...and I'd like more of an investigation."

The purge stems from a 2011 law passed by the Texas legislature compelling election officials to use Social Security Administration data to scrub the voter rolls of dead voters.

Texas officials' efforts to clean the state's voter database have mimicked similar purge efforts in other states, including Florida, that have yielded similar controversy. Earlier this year, a national outcry erupted when Bill Internicola, a 91-year old World War II veteran living in South Florida, was purged from Florida's voter rolls after being mistakenly identified as a non-citizen.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
19 Comments Add a Comment
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marychgo says:
It's pretty simple: there are more Obama/Biden supporters than supporters of the Spoiled Fratboy ticket -- and they know it! So they're pulling out all the stops, trying to win one more presidential election for the party that, as Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-NC) pointed out, increasingly represents only "angry old white men." So they purge dead people who are actually still alive in Texas and active service members in Florida -- all AFTER the date beyond which the Voting Rights Act says purges are ILLEGAL! So VOTE -- and drag everyone you can find to the polls with you!
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audemus says:
I'm just surprised that there aren't more people OUTRAGED at these "Republicans". They are a stinky, motley collection of disgustingly dishonest, sociopathic and lying oligarchs, thieves, felons, elitists and right-wing religious nuts who will do anything to "win" this election. They are convinced that if their money can't buy it, then their willingness to break the law, dupe the simple-minded, and **** all over OUR Democracy will. These people need to be prosecuted and/or exiled, because obviously they do not believe in our system enough to allow it to legitimately and without tampering function as it was and is intended to do. They have become an international embarrassment. There is already a petition circulating to ban this entire corrupt party from ever participating in ANY election ever again in this country, and it's apparently gaining some traction. Even figuratively this petition says a lot about the state of a political party when ordinary citizens from all walks of life are coming together in agreement that it should be given the death penalty.
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levelheadedtoo says:
There are three things about Texas
1 the Bush Family
2 Rick Perry
3. I forget
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BigMykul says:
parrot2-2009 replies: linkicon reporticon emailicon And if he had moved addresses and not gotten the letter, or it got crossed in the mail - Then What ??
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There is this new thing from the USPS called a Change of Address kit. You can pick one up at the Post Office. Actually, each time I have moved since the 1990's, one was dropped in my box by the local mail carrier.
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Eco99 says:
Go figure and you know this is happening in swing states as well that have Republican administrations they just haven't been caught yet.
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TJphoto says:
The Fix is in, and just in time. Shocking!!!
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abbe91 replies:
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Don't forget Premier (ex-Diebold) in Ohio ...
If this election is too close, it will be for Romney.
Fortunately 2008 was a landslide for Obama.
Conclusion: go to vote.
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Dancing-in-the-Streets says:
When I show up to vote - if they try to tell me I'm dead - I'll show them just how ALIVE I am!

OBAMA 2012 : )
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audemus says:
A Republican vote this year is an affirmation of dishonesty, corruption, ineptitude, and stupidity.

I try not to even listen to anything coming from the right anymore because they have lied and insulted my intelligence once too often. If there are any "legit" Republicans out there, you'd better come to the aid of your party before it completely disappears under the appalling stench of neo-naziism
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Dancing-in-the-Streets replies:
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Amen!
Eco99 replies:
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I Second that remark!!
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raboz says:
I am proud to be a Texan but ashamed at the direction this state has taken in recent years politically! The Republican party will do anything in it's power to repress the votes from anyone not aligned with their philosophy. Between their redistricting and voter purges it is clear to me that they will stoop to any low to better ensure and grow their majority.
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dj_chi replies:
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No Mort, they went by names that sounded ethnic... I imagine O'Shaughnessey didn't make the list, but Ramirez did.
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AOCGUY says:
The popularity of certain surnames????

I'm not very fond of the voter purge due to the cost vs limited benefit but it seems in this case that Texas did try to ascertain his staus. They did write to him after all. If they had just taken his name off the list without attempting to contact him that would be different but from what I just read it doesn't appear that he is going to be denied the right to vote.
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parrot2-2009 replies:
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And if he had moved addresses and not gotten the letter, or it got crossed in the mail - Then What ??
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