A Pew Center study finds that there are problems with voter registration in the US. The Politico version of this study highlights these findings, that "about 24 million registrations are no longer valid and nearly 2 million dead people are still on voter rolls," that "there are 2.75 million people currently registered to vote in more than one state," and that:
at least 51 million eligible U.S. citizens aren’t registered to vote. That’s nearly one in four, or 24 percent of the eligible population.
Pew says explicitly that the problem here is record-keeping, not foul play: "findings did not suggest any kind of voter fraud or voter suppression from these problems, but noted they do 'underscore the need for an improved system.'"
Hence, mouth-breathing bottom-feeder (he's versatile!) Rick Moran concludes... fraud!
Remember: We don't need Voter ID laws because our system is sound as...well, a dollar.
Voter ID laws, of course, would do nothing to solve this problem, because registration is different from voting. However, voter ID laws exacerbate this much larger problem that Moran ignores, which is, again:
at least 51 million eligible U.S. citizens aren’t registered to vote. That’s nearly one in four, or 24 percent of the eligible population.
MAS. To clarify, the quote from Pew about how their findings should not be interpreted to indicate fraud is from the linked Politico article, not the Pew study itself. Thanks to ice-9 in comments.