The public widely supports voter ID laws:
- Gallup published a poll in October 2022 finding 79% of voters support voter ID laws, including 97% of Republicans, 84% of Independents, and 53% of Democrats.
- A UMass poll in January 2022 found that 67% of voters favor requiring voter ID at polling stations, including 93% of Republicans, 50% of Democrats, 63% of Independents, and 60% of African American voters.
- A poll released by the Honest Elections Project in July 2021 found that 81% of voters surveyed support requiring every voter to show a photo ID to cast a ballot.
- According to the June 2021 Monmouth University Poll, 4 in 5 Americans (80%) support requiring voters to show photo identification in order to cast a ballot; 18% oppose. Support for requiring a photo ID stood at 62% among Democrats, 87% among independents, and 91% among Republicans.
- A nationwide University of Massachusetts Amherst/WCVB poll released in April 2021 reported that 67% of voters supported requirements to have all voters show ID with roughly a majority of voters expressing strong for this requirement.
- A Fox News poll in April 2021 showed 77% of voters nationally think “a valid form of state or federally issued photo identification to prove U.S. citizenship” should be needed for voting.
- A YouGov/The Economist poll in April 2021 found that 52% of Americans support requiring a photo ID in order to vote absentee with only 31% opposed.
- In March 2021, a national poll by Selzer & Co./Grinnell College showed 56% of adults favored keeping laws that require people to show a photo ID before voting, while just 36% wanted to eliminate them.
- An Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll conducted in March 2021 found that nearly three-quarters of all Americans — including majorities of both parties — said they support laws requiring voters to present photo identification.
- In March 2021, a study conducted by Rasmussen Reports revealed that 75% of voters believe photo identification should be presented before voting and that 69% of black voters support voter ID laws. Furthermore, the poll revealed that 60% of Democrats support showing an ID to vote as do 89% of Republicans. The polling showed that only 21% oppose voter ID laws.
- Tufts Public Opinion Lab released a report in March 2021 showing 7 in 10 Americans support strict voter ID laws; including 90% of Republicans, 50% of Democrats, 70% of White respondents, 66% of Hispanic respondents, and 56% of Black respondents.
- A January 2021 poll by the University of Georgia and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution revealed that 74% of registered voters backed requiring voters to include a copy of their photo ID or other documentation in order to vote by mail with only 22% opposing.
- Conducted between August and November 2020, the results of a poll from the American National Election Studies showed that 68% of Americans support strict voter ID laws, 19% opposed such laws, and the remaining 13% were neutral on the issue.
- In August 2019, the nonpartisan Texas Lyceum found 81% of Texans, including 72% of Democrats, favor a law that requires voters to present one of seven government-based photo IDs or bring utility bills, bank statements or paychecks and sign an affidavit saying they had trouble getting an accepted ID.
- A survey by Pew Research prior to the 2018 Election discovered 76% of Americans favored requiring government-issued photo identification to vote. Ninety-one percent of Republicans and 63% of Democrats supported a photo ID requirement.
- In a September 2018 survey, Rasmussen Reports found that 67% of likely U.S. voters think voters should be required to show photo identification before voting.
- In August 2017, Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey found that 70% of likely U.S. voters support requiring photo identification before being allowed to vote.
- In an August 2016 poll by Gallup, 80% of Americans supported a requirement that all voters show photo identification before voting, including 95% of Republicans, 63% of Democrats, and 83% of independents.
- In a March 2016 poll by Rasmussen Reports, 69% of Americans believed voters should be required to show photo identification prior to voting.
- In a 2012 poll by The Washington Post, 74% of Americans supported laws requiring photo identification at the polls. In addition, Americans were more concerned about the potential for voter fraud than the potential for voter suppression.
- In 2013, 65% of New Hampshire citizens surveyed by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center supported voter ID, including 85% of Republicans, 76% of independents, and 42% of Democrats.
Published opinions supporting voter ID laws:
- Op-Ed: Why we Black leaders support voter ID laws (U.S. Reps. Burgess Owens, et. al in the Center Square, April 18, 2021)
- Claiming state voting reforms are racist is ridiculous. I should know: Ken Blackwell (Ken Blackwell in USA Today, April 8, 2021)
- Americans Support Voter ID Laws – The Arizona Legislature Should Too by Passing SB1713 (Admin for Arizona Free Enterprise Club, March 23, 2021)
- The Voter Suppression Myth (Wall Street Journal Editorial Board, May 3, 2019)
- Data Disprove the ‘Voter Suppression’ Myth (Jason L. Riley in The Wall Street Journal, May 7, 2019)
- I’m a black Democrat and I backed GOP’s voter ID (Op-ed by NC State Senator Joel Ford in The Charlotte Observer, December 5, 2018)
- Voter ID would prevent fraud (Op-ed by Steven Pinson in The Baltimore Sun, March 2, 2018)
- Voting important enough to require identification (Charleston Gazette-Mail editorial, updated November 21, 2017)
- Voter ID: Nothing wrong with W.Va. bill (Bluefield Daily Telegraph editorial, February 23, 2016)
- True Intent of Voter ID Laws: Common Sense (Guest Columnist Jay Ashcroft in The Missouri Times, February 22, 2016)
- The voter fraud too many deny (Op-ed by Jay Delancy in The News & Observer (Raleigh, NC), February 18, 2016)
- A bad day for voter ID opponents (Christian Schneider of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, February 17, 2016)
- Voting important enough to require identification (Charleston Gazette-Mail editorial, February 12, 2016)
Last updated December 14, 2022