To save time, I am paraphrasing myself from OCDO below:
The Bush Administration looked at this exhaustively and found 9 cases of possible voter identity fraud nationwide. Let us suppose – solely for the sake of argument -- that one of these cases was in Virginia. . . .
In the Veritas video, Breitbart’s boys accost Patrick Moran in a coffee shop and tell him that they have a list containing “hundreds” of inactive voters, and an unquenchable a desire to cast votes for these people out of anxieties about Republicans.
To obtain such a list of inactive voters, one would likely leave a paper trail that might be traced to the organizers of the fraud. The organizers would then have to recruit enough volunteers to fit the age and sex characteristics of the persons on the list, who are willing to travel to the precincts of the persons on the list, and willing to commit a serious felony once they get there. It takes rather motivated volunteers to just to do the driving, let alone to face serious jail-time for you. It is not going to be so easy to find them.
So you are going to have to contact (to be very generous) at least several hundred people to find the 25 co-conspirators you will need. That is going to be kind of tricky, because it only takes one to squeal to get you a 10-year stay at club fed. If I, or virtually any other party activist I know got got a call from someone proposing something like this, our next call would be to the authorities. We will never know many times Veritas had to attempt to entrap some poor fool campaign staffer before they finally found one willing to speculate out loud about what such a plot would require.
If you successfully recruit enough willing felons, you need to forge false documentation for each one of them, and get it to them. You have to worry that any one of the volunteers may get caught trying to execute the plan, because one of your “inactive voters” may show up, or because someone at the precinct may recognize that your volunteer is not the person they are pretending to be.
If that happens, the gig is up, for you and everyone involved in your little your conspiracy. You also may have seriously damaged whatever cause prompted you to take these risks.
If I had 25 super-volunteers who were prepared to go to this extent to win an election, I could use them to produce a lot more votes by employing them in legitimate “get out the vote” efforts. If I had to pay these people enough to take these risks, I could use that money in much more effective ways to get my guys elected.
Based on New Hampshire's 2012 experience of 1% of voters showing up without ID, and a 2007 Cal Tech study which concluded that 10% of voters do not show up at all if you make strict demands for photo ID, you would need 423,990 more than fraudulent votes in VIrginia to offset the legitimate votes you would lose by implementing this law.
423,990/200 votes per conspiracy = 2020. That is the number of actual Patrick Moran/Veritas type conspiracies you would need in Virginia to equal the harms you would cause with the proposed version of this legislation. So far, there is not evidence of one. All you have is a partisan prank by Veritas which led a young staffer down a dark path for a few minutes.
So IMHO there is no justification for this bill whatsoever.