New Hampshire’s Attorney General and Secretary of State are investigating thousands of unreturned and undeliverable voter affidavits mailed to “more than 20,000 voters who were allowed to register to vote and cast ballots last year while not being able to prove where they lived or who they are, as part of the state’s new voter ID law.” “The Voter ID law in New Hampshire, parts of which are up for a repeal vote in the House this week, required three separate mailers be sent out to voters who didn’t have the proper identification during the voting and/or registration process: Qualified voter affidavits, domicile affidavits, and challenged voter affidavits.” Of approximately 22,200 mailers sent, about 3,300 affidavit postcards have not been returned by voters, and 1,697 mailers have been returned by the post office as undeliverable. Undeniably significant numbers, but enough to change the outcome of an election? If the investigation finds that fraudulent votes were cast, then “the results of some of the House and Senate races could have been affected, due to the razor-thin victory margins in some of those races.” Which makes Democrats’ rush to roll back voter ID before it’s fully implemented all the more premature. As Rep. Shawn Jasper (R-Hudson) points out: “The claim has been made for years that there is no voter fraud in New Hampshire; the simple fact of the matter is that until now we have never actively looked for it. It is clear to the minority that it is too soon to say that there was no voter fraud in 2012.”