Easy to Vote—Hard to Cheat
The foundation of the American system of self-governance is liberty, and the core expression of the people’s liberty is the ability to vote in free and fair elections. Safeguarding the integrity of our elections is paramount to preserving our republic. Election Integrity will work with relevant stakeholders across the country and within states to help ensure there are strong laws in place at the local level—making it easy to vote, but hard to cheat.
Election Integrity (CEI) has a simple goal: “Easy to Vote, but Hard to Cheat.”
With that pursuit in mind, CEI developed this educational, interactive, color-coded map that compares an individual state's current election integrity laws to other states. There are three main policy areas widely acknowledged to better protect voters: photo ID requirements, strong laws against ballot harvesting, and ballots returned to election officials by Election Day. CEI weighted these three key voter protections more heavily as a guide for the comparative categories of red, yellow, and green. (Click here to learn more about CEI’s specific methodology) This map will serve to better educate Americans on the local voter protection measures needed to restore faith, trust, and confidence in our elections.

The U.S. Constitution gives State Legislatures the right and responsibility to decide how their states will conduct elections. CEI will work to educate legislators, business leaders, grassroots organizations, and other relevant stakeholders as to the importance and impact of strong election integrity measures.
Team
The Honorable J. Kenneth Blackwell
Chair, Election Integrity
Hogan Gidley
Vice Chair, Election Integrity & Senior Advisor for Communications
Mike Vallante
Director, Election Integrity
Anna Pingel
Elections Campaign Manager
Jason Allen
Michigan Policy Advisor, Election Integrity
Jordan Kittleson
Senior Advisor, Election Integrity
Kat Miller
Policy Analyst, Election Integrity
Latest
An Analysis of the Federal Voting Assistance Program and Recommendations for Improvement
The Federal Voting Assistance Program (FVAP) was established in 1986 to help service members, their families, and U.S. citizens overseas register to vote and cast ballots in federal elections. Nearly four decades later, many still face obstacles, reflected in persistently low participation rates that show that the program is not fully serving the people it was created to help.
AFPI Releases Statement on Ranked Choice Voting
The America First Policy Institute (AFPI) today released the following statement from J. Kenneth Blackwell, chair for Election Integrity in response to the proposed Ranked Choice Voting Act.
Commercial Data is Essential for Election Integrity
For decades, voter rolls have relied on antiquated systems like the Postal Service’s National Change of Address (NCOA) file and DMV records—tools built for an era when Americans moved less and government databases lacked real-time coordination. These systems lag behind real-world changes, such as when voters move, change names, or pass away, and updates can take months or years to appear in official databases. The result is outdated, inaccurate, and often duplicated voter records that leave openings to exploitation and fraud—all of which delay results and undermine trust in elections.
AFPI Applauds Supreme Court Stay in Texas Redistricting Case
The America First Policy Institute (AFPI) today praised the U.S. Supreme Court for issuing a stay in Abbott v. League of United Latin American Citizens, allowing Texas to proceed with its duly enacted 2025 congressional map. AFPI represented numerous senior elections officials across Texas during the appeals process, after the lower court left Texas counties with impossible choices and unattainable deadlines.
My Race Isn’t Your Political Forecast
Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court sat for a re-argument of what promises to be one of its most important cases in recent memory: Louisiana v. Callais.
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