Despite an all-out campaign against voter integrity laws from the far-left, a majority of Democrats support voter ID laws, a Rasmussen poll released on Friday found.
According to the poll, 63 percent of Democrats “believe that requiring photo ID to vote is a reasonable measure to protect the integrity of elections.” Most Republicans — 88 percent — and unaffiliated voters — 74 percent — are also supportive of voter ID laws, and 75 percent of voters overall back the measure. Nineteen percent of voters disagree.
“Those findings are virtually unchanged since June,” according to the poll, in which 1,000 likely U.S. voters were surveyed between December 7-8, 2021. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95 percent level of confidence.
Voters’ concern about election integrity has risen from 79 percent in June to 83 percent who say it is “very important to prevent cheating in elections.” More than a third — 34 percent — of voters still do not believe President Joe Biden “won the presidential election fairly.”
Unsurprisingly, Biden’s strongest supporters are less likely to support voter ID laws, though nearly half [49 percent] are still in favor of them. In contrast, 94 percent of voters who “strongly disapprove” of Biden’s job performance think voter ID requirements are reasonable.
Another recent survey found that 77 percent of voters across the board explicitly “reject ‘racism’ as a reason for voter integrity laws, and believe one party uses it for political purposes, not for electoral progress.” The same report found that 80 percent of voters believe voter ID is a significant security measure.