A Trump election conspiracy theory has fallen apart after Florida’s law enforcement agency said it had found no widespread voter fraud in the 2018 races for Senate and governor.
https://www.politico.com/states/florida/story/2020/05/21/a-trump-election-conspiracy-collapses-1285442
The more people that vote, the better the democrats will do.
Conversely, the fewer people that vote, the better the Republicans will do.
Democrats are more prone to allow voter fraud, Republicans are more prone to suppressing voters.
You are conflating the ability to commit voter fraud with simply enabling voting. This is a popular fallacy Democrats like to spout any time voter fraud is brought up, because Democrats DEPEND on voter fraud to have a chance in hell. FYI, New Jersey isn't Florida.
Looks like over the past several years there have been almost 1,000 convictions: https://www.heritage.org/sites/default/files/voterfraud_download/VoterFraudCases_5.pdf Really not that big a deal. Especially for a general election.
And trumps voter fraud commission turned up nothing.
"Report: Trump commission did not find widespread voter fraud"
https://apnews.com/f5f6a73b2af546ee97816bb35e82c18d/Report:-Trump-commission-did-not-find-widespread-voter-fraud....
The article really does not say what you assert.
Here is an excerpt.
The Trump administration last month complied with a court order to turn over documents from the voting integrity commission to Dunlap. The commission met just twice and has not issued a report.
Dunlap’s findings received immediate pushback Friday from Kobach, who acted as vice chair of the commission while Pence served as chair.
“For some people, no matter how many cases of voter fraud you show them, there will never be enough for them to admit that there’s a problem,” said Kobach, who is running for Kansas governor and has a good chance of unseating the incumbent, Jeff Colyer, in the Republican primary Tuesday.
“It appears that Secretary Dunlap is willfully blind to the voter fraud in front of his nose,” Kobach said in a statement released by his spokesman.
Kobach said there have been more than 1,000 convictions for voter fraud since 2000, and that the commission presented 8,400 instances of double voting in the 2016 election in 20 states.
“Had the commission done the same analysis of all 50 states, the number would have been exponentially higher,” Kobach said.
In response, Dunlap said those figures were never brought before the commission, and that Kobach hasn’t presented any evidence for his claims of double voting. He said the commission was presented with a report claiming over 1,000 convictions for various forms of voter misconduct since 1948.