perhaps the percentage of voting fraud is VERY small - not enough to tip even a local election - fine
I'm not a believer in perception is reality. If reality doesn't match perception, then chance the perception
but, if it's easier to change the perception of elections being at risk to fraud and lack of security by requiring registration and IDs, than convincing the public to change their perception, then ...........
Let's say the new requirement would be a considerable burden to 10% of the public because they are poor or simply have trouble with simple requirements.
Then let's guess that 25% of those people actually care enough to vote.
I understand the principal of protecting citizen's rights, not just the poor.
Is protecting this principal worth the effort? Especially when that effort might cause your party to lose elections.