Your comparison is apples and oranges.
Why would you divide 8 absentee vote fraud cases (or 8 years) by 8 million votes? Makes no sense as they are two entirely different things.
As I said before, I hope you'll be perfectly ok with voter fraud if it's from Repub candidates who win.
I'm sure voter fraud has in the past occurred on both sides of the fence, however, going by the last names of those accused in the list,
I'd say most were Dems.
Here's one...Marty Small...who somehow has ended up Mayor of decrepit, crime infested Atlantic City, NJ:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marty_Small_Sr.
"Small was first elected to the Atlantic City city council as 2nd Ward councilman in 2003.[4]
In 2006 he was charged and acquitted of election fraud, and in 2011 he was again charged and acquitted of election fraud concerning the 2009 Atlantic City mayoral election along with five other Democrats.[5]
In 2017, Small narrowly lost to Frank Gilliam in the Democratic primary for Atlantic City mayor.[4][5]
Following the resignation of previous Atlantic City mayor Frank Gilliam, the city council voted to appoint Small as mayor.[6][2] He will serve for an unexpired term ending on December 31, 2020, following the city's November 2020 special election for mayor."
Apples and oranges? So you are pointing out that there is voter fraud. Nobody is denying that it can an does happen. I leave the number of voters and the extremely tiny percentage of them which are fraudulent out to simplify what I am saying. Based on the link you posted there were 8 incidences of voter mail fraud over the course of 10 years. That's not even one mail fraud related vote per year. Really not enough for anyone to be concerned about.
Small was appointed Mayor of Atlantic City by the City Council. Perhaps he was the only option they had. Maybe no one else wanted the job. Not surprised, it is a thankless one.
Small was twice charged and acquitted of mail fraud. Did you miss the part where he was acquitted?
Essentially, a verdict of not guilty is an acquittal. ... But an acquittal doesn't mean the jury or judge found you innocent of the charge. It only means that the prosecution failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that you were guilty. A not guilty verdict isn't the sole means of getting an acquittal.
If you want to reference the rest of the definition where it says an acquittal doesn't mean you are innocent, that's cool. Remember Trump was acquitted by the Senate of impeachment.
"A deeply divided Senate acquitted President Donald Trump at the end of his impeachment trial on Wednesday, with 52 Senators concluding the House’s allegations that he abused the power of his office did not necessitate his removal of office, and 53 reaching that conclusion on the charge that he obstructed Congress."