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Bored now, they offered a free ID in Georgia and that did not placate anyone. How does this remind anyone of a poll tax? Does it unfairly target a certain group? Are only certain groups required to show their ID's under this proposal. Anyone who opposes this must want to keep people voting fraudulantly and numerously. I can't think why any reasonable person would oppose this, especially if a free state ID is issued.
How hard is it to get a state ID? Is Jesse White running things that poorly?
Now, to address the asinine arguments of the proposals critics:
You must register to vote – no one questions that, right? Well, what do you need to register? An address. Now, I find it really hard to believe that anyone with an address, and thus presumably pays either rent or a mortgage, can’t afford $20 every 5 years for an ID card (or doesn’t already have an ID to begin with). What’s that? You say seniors, or people with disabilities, often have an address, but are on assistance programs and fixed incomes. Well, then it’s a good thing that they already gets these cards for free, anyway.
The only people that this requirement disenfranchises is the truly homeless, who are already disenfranchised! To liken this to Jim Crow is racial fear mongering, plain and simple.
BTW, last time I checked, owning a firearm was a constitutionally protected right of mine. But the state doesn’t seem to have any problem making jump through 13 hoops, fill out forms, OBTAIN AN ID, and pay a fee, in order to exercise it on a limited basis. Just food for thought.
what is really funny is that i've worked on some of the closest elections in the past 25 years, and i can't remember a single instance or even claim of voter fraud on a mass basis. this is at best a strawman argument, and in reality, a thinly-disgused attempt at voter suppression.
As far as bored now not knowing about vote fraud on a massive basis, East St. Louis comes to mind. Then there's Philadelphia, Detroit, Milwaukee where some precincts had more voters than residents, a miraculous turnout.
By the way - the idea that illegals will vote is nothing short of asinine. I've worked in a restaurant with immigrants. One guy who WAS LEGAL was afraid to answer a jury summons because he thought he'd be deported.
The idea that someone who isn't legal is going to risk deportation in the interest of Rod Blagojevich or Judy Baar Topinka is sheer demagoguery.
Perhaps Rep. Stephens should pass a law that pharmacists must show customers an ID proving they are not fraudulent and that they will do the job the law requires of them.
1) Is there evidence of significant voting fraud on the part of the individuals attempting to vote? And I'm not talking about institutional fraud, i.e. voting fraud on the part of those collecting and counting the votes.
2) And if there is evidence of significant fraud by people attempting to vote, is there any evidence that this i.d. plan would address that problem?
Unless someone can show evidence -- evidence, not anecdotes -- indicating that the answer to those two questions is yes, I would have to oppose Rep. Stephens’ proposal as an undue and unwise burden on the right to vote.
It therefore follows that the requirement for photo ID showing the voters' current address will suppress voting by poor and minorities. That's what should make it both unconstitutional and mean-spirited, discriminatory public policy.
Our current Illinois law provides a less restrictive alternative to this proposal while suppressing voter fraud: voter registration in person requires presentation of IDs and if the person does not disclose a place of birth which shows him to be native born, requires the date and place of naturalization. Voter registration by mail (required by federal law) requires receipt of regular mail and presentation of positive ID at the first time of voting. Then, voting is accomplished by the voter supplying a matching signature on the ballot application. If the signature does not reasonably match, then presentation of ID is required.
If the election boards, county clerks and state's attorneys do not effectively check to be sure that voter fraud does not exist, they either don't care enough about the problem to stop it or they are lazy. In either case, the solution is to punish the watchdog by throwing him out of office or shaming him into doing his job. The solution is not to beat up on the poor and/or minorities.
1. Make the IDs for registered Democrats be BLUE, the IDs for registered Republicans RED, and independents WHITE. This will help to continue to alienate third parties, and allow people to see what your affiliation is from a distance. That will help with party discipline.
2. Make it a requirement to give a phone number when you apply for the card. That way the political parties have direct access to you come election contributon time.
3. We should have to renew the card every election cycle. This will make it more difficult for 'causal' voters, and increase the voting strength of the party loyalist voters (i.e. the people with the most to gain or lose based on the outcome of an election)
4. Because it will require a picture, we'll need to set up offices statewide to issue & maintain the cards. The offices can be funded by a small fee needed to get the card (like GOP says above, perhaps $5) This infrastucture will require more state employees, and will result in a few more patronage positions for the pols in Springfield.
Honestly, what is not to like about this plan?
For the poll tax argument to work, you need an actual tax.
Stephens' proposal makes perfect sense to me. Without a valid ID, there's no way of knowing if someone is truly registered to vote and if they're in the proper election district/polling place.
And SCAM, there is significant evidence of voter fraud right there in East St. Louis. How many people were recently convicted of that very crime down there?
Paying cash for votes, moving polling places, 25 people registered at the same vacant apartment address. I'm no federal prosecutor, but that sounds like blatant voter fraud to me. And don't even get me started about the Chicago Machine.
i know all the bushies are for huge, activist goverment, but my own belief is that government should be a vehicle of last resort, solving actual problems and not irrational fears, and not duplicate tasks already being done. this idiotic proposal fails on all three.
there is no epidemic of voter fraud, especially not from illegals. and we already have a system for preventing voter fraud, via election judges. both parties have election judges in the polls, and it is part of their job to prevent voter fraud. furthermore, local and state republican parties already make it easy for fellow republicans to report suspected voter fraud.
finally, proposals like this are easily circumvented, by voting absentee where no driver's license will be offered. a lot of voter fraud (or perceived voter fraud) uses absentee ballots, so this would be easily gotten around. so there must be another reason to propose something like, like intimidation of poor and minority voters. in fact, this is how it is discussed at higher levels.
as for your agreement to my proposal, i'll believe you when you abandon your conditional support. if you believe in this provision, then you should be willing to pay for it. that's just common sense.
backyard: id's are not the norm everywhere. i often travel without an id, and have even flown from chicago to florida (and back) without one since 9/11. many poor people and urban dwellers don't have driver's licenses, which is why the state id program exist. in rural america, obtaining a dl is a rite of passage (often, for kids who were driving already, anyway, it just made it legal).
as ydd always likes to point out, i'm not always familar with illinois history, and i made it clear that i was relying on my own personal experience. could you provide some (non-partisan or legal) case studies where people walked into the polls and voted without the right to. i've heard of shannigans in east st. louis, but unfamiliar with the facts. please enlighten me. nor do i understand your reference to philly, detroit or milwaukee (although, again, i've heard things about milwaukee). but i suspect that you're focused on municipal elections, which is ok, if you live there. i doubt you do, so your comment about electoral integrity smacks of convenience, not principle.
quite frankly, i strongly question your contention that there were more voters than residents in any case. that's an absurd claim on your part. of course, democrats make a similar claim of phenomenal results in 12 counties in ohio in 2004, something i'm equally sceptical of. in the end, i can't think of any form of voter fraud that can be stopped or even curtailed by the photo id requirement.
a much more simple explanation is the desire to disenfranchise voters who don't think like you do OR to have your fears catered to (this is a great fund-raising device, and i'm sure stephens will benefit greatly from it). quite frankly, i've had enough of this country catering to irrational fears (eg, other jim crow laws or the invasion of iraq). i'm not at all inclined to legitimize voter irrationality...
This bill will not require anyone to obtain anything that they do not already have to obtain in order to complete the voting process (from registration to casting the ballot).
What is does is ensure that people who register in person but are known to not regularly vote, or have already voted before are dead), do not have their vote cast by someone other than they. Your name stays on the rolls after you die, and if you’ve voted before, all that is really needed is someone of the same gender to come in, squiggle a signature and get that ballot. Voter fraud happens most in heavily one-party precinct where the judges aren’t checking the signatures well enough because they assume that whomever is pulling that ballot is voting the way they want them to anyway, and the opposing party judge is probably not even a member of the party they are representing to begin with. Thus, RBD brings up a good point: if the election judges are not verifying the signatures properly, will they verify the IDs? Maybe not. But suppose they had to capture and record an image of the ID, like some downtown nightclubs do for liability purposes?
Or, we could just all dip our finger in some purple ink after we vote. But I’m sure there’ll be someone out there allergic to the ink, and the ACLU will be right back on the case, making sure that it’s as easy as possible for votes to be stolen.
i don't disagree with this, but what makes you think this will change with a voter id law? if election judges are abusing the system (or allowing it to be abused), why would they uphold this current proposal? again, voter id laws alter nothing that people object to (or couldn't be addressed other ways), BUT DO RESULT IN VOTER SUPPRESSION. which, methinks, is the point...
As for your flying from Chicago to Flordia without an ID....I'm not calling you a liar, per se, but I don't buy it. You have to have some sort of ID to fly: DL, Passport.....how did they validate your identity to make sure it matched the name on the ticket, might I ask? They have to do that, and if they didn't then you got away with something you shouldn't have.
Any argument based on disenfranchisement or voter suppression is completely invalid.
With the excessive vote fraud in Cook County, I would expect not only a picture ID but a second form of ID as well.
We need to stop excessive white guilt over ethnic minorities.
If candidates are expected to meet minimum requirements, then so should the voters.
We are treating ethnic minorities like irresponsible school children. Most people have picture ID's since they are 16.
I think eliminating vote fraud is more important than "disenfranchising" a few people.
Ashur Odishoo
Candidate
State Representative 11th District
(i) a copy of a current and valid photo identification, or (ii) a copy of a current utility bill, bank statement, government check, paycheck or other government document that shows your name and address. If you do not
provide the information required above, then you will be required to provide election officials with this information the first time you
vote at a polling place or by in-person absentee ballot
So in order to register, you do not need to have a photo id. So the argument about needing a photo id to register is not true.
So why not have at every polling place an extra station that takes these very same documents allowed to register and gives the people, if they don't have a DL or state ID, a photo state voting id?
as for my id story, i should have said without a photo id. i had an employer id without a photo (and, i believe, my birth certificate), which meant that i was forced to board last, and had to watch my baggage sit next to the plane even after i boarded. i try to check my writing, but obviously i miss stuff, in this case, an important word.
I assume these elections are out there, but I was curious how many and how big of a problem this truly is. Putting one more hassle in the way of voters to solve a vastly over-hyped problem doesn't sound like a sensible tradeoff to me.
How about this:
Voters can either produce a voter id or elect to dip their finger in ink, just like they do in Iraq.
It presumably answers both the Republic and Democatic fears on the issue.
I have no idea. And that's the problem. Real evidence that EITHER situation is happening to any appreciable degree is absent.
Liberals are greatly overstating the likelihood of this new law being a barrier to voting.
Conservatives are greatly overstating the likelihood/current problem of voter fraud.
And no one has any real numbers to back this up. It's a hopeless political battle, designed to test the relative strength and will of various interest groups, not to solve or improve any real societal problem.
i understand and accept that voter fraud occurs on both sides, and i find it contemptible. but most examples of voter fraud i know of (and i suspect, in the examples bc cites above) occur at the partisan level, not that of the individual voter. in fact, most instances of "voter fraud" at the individual level, in my experience, was negligence, not intent.
this legislation is a trojan horse -- attempting to solve the problem of too many democrats who vote, not individuals attempting to fraudalently vote. and this is obviously in your mind, as you make no attempt to provide examples of where this proposal might reduce voter fraud, while merely pointing to irrational fears and dismissing the racial overtones therein. it's not a serious idea...
btw, i have no qualms with the ink-stained finger idea; i've been an election monitor in a country where this was used. not any different than the "i voted" stickers; people proudly displayed them.
Most sensible post on this subject. 100% on target. Wish I had said it.
The differences could explain why some of the laws have been upheld and some haven't. From an AP story out of Missouri:
***
But there are differences within the details of the states' laws.
For example, the Indiana law is not specific on how the free photo ID cards are to be distributed.
The Georgia law requires each county to have at least one place where it will issue the cards.
The Missouri law goes further, requiring that photo ID cards be made available not only through license offices but also through nine mobile processing units that can be dispatched to nursing homes and other places "frequented by disabled and elderly persons."
But to get a free ID, Missourians must comply with a separate state law requiring them to prove their "lawful presence" in the United States. For most people, that means showing a birth certificate.
Those who can't find it must get a replacement. Missouri charges $15 for a birth certificate. The lawsuit claims that amounts to an illegal poll tax.
Poll tax arguments also were raised in Indiana and Georgia.
The Indiana court said the plaintiffs failed to show they would actually have to buy a new birth certificate and noted it was just one of several options for getting a photo ID there. It said the cost of getting a birth certificate did not constitute a poll tax because it was not "sufficiently tied to the requirements of voting." Nor can the costs of time and transportation to get a photo ID be considered a poll tax, the Indiana court said.
The Georgia court cited the Indiana ruling while also determining the poll tax argument lacked "a substantial likelihood of success." It, too, noted that a birth certificate was only one of many documents that could be used while getting a photo ID card in Georgia.
In contrast, "in Missouri, there's absolutely no other way. If you don't have identification, you're going to have to pay money either for a birth certificate or a passport," said Don Downing, a St. Louis attorney handling the lawsuit.
The states' laws also differ when it comes to counting the provisional ballots of people who still lack a photo ID on Election Day.
****
The Georgia secretary of state has estimated that there are 676,000 voters who have no ID with the Department of Motor Vehicles (the GOP disputes the number). In Missouri, Democrats are claiming in a lawsuit there are 170,000 voter with no ID.
Here's a story with a little background (kinda old, though. Sorry): http://www.stateline.org/live/ViewPage.action?s...
As far as examples of vote fraud, besides the obvious one of St. Louis, documented in the Belleville News-Democrat:
http://www.belleville.com/mld/belleville/news/l...
Here's more from Larry Sabato, a respected, non-partisan expert:
http://rules.senate.gov/hearings/2001/062701_sa...
Also this on Detroit:
http://www.clickondetroit.com/politics/5254036/...
There are a number of problems, but let's tackle them in a common sense way, and get past the demogoguery.
Here in Illinois, it's "Voter-Intimidation-R-Us". Just add photo ID to the long list of low-grade subterfuges designed to frustrate people and discourage them from voting.
When are we going to crawl our way out of nineteenth century voter registration structures and requirements? Never, of course: diehard partisans want only the true believers to vote.
We COULD have instant registration on voting days, as some states now have.
We COULD have a centralized voter registration database and imaging system that would permit people to show up and vote ANYWHERE in the state. (Or at least regionalize this and save money: how many gazillion dippy little precincts do we need? How many county clerks/boards of election do we need screwing up submissions of hard copy to the Illinois State Board of Elections?)
We COULD have (gasp! gag!) open primaries.
We COULD vote on Sundays (as many nations do) so that people need not take off from work (and/or get intimidated by employers to skip voting).
You want icing on this cake? Lest anyone forget, Illinois was dragged kicking and screaming into the federal motor voter law: the other 49 states bought in, and we wasted taxpayer money suing over it.
I repeat: the powers-that-be DON'T WANT voting to be convenient. End of diatribe.
Yes, I laugh at the idea of checking sigs. The FBI has handwriting experts on staff, do you think they look at the 2 samples and then immediately say, yep, it's the same person? If it takes that expert time to compare writing samples, how likely is it that an election judge (or a grocery clerk for that matter) is going to be able to lend any accuracy to the signature check?
as for your experience as an election judge, we have to weigh your convenience (one person) against the convenience of others (the many). interestingly, the people who you want to be inconvienced don't think like you! i'm shocked!
bbn: i'm sorry you can't read. but to summarize, i'm arguing that voter fraud is a problem, but not at the individual level. i can't think of an election where voter fraud has decided the outcome -- not that i don't doubt this has occurred at a local level. hence, this proposal has no upside (unless you count easing the concerns of irrational people) and a significant downside.
For those who complain that the election judges and poll watchers don't do their job, the solution is to make the system work the way it is supposed to and not to further depress the honest vote.
Marginal lawmaker in marginalized minority party proposes election reform that won't be considered until after the election.
Does anything more really need to be said?
I agree the FBI has more to consider and eliminate than an election judge, but I also don't believe that anyone without training on handwriting recognition is really all that capable of accurately checking a signature and certainly not in the length of time the usual election judge has to give to it.
I'm not really criticizing election judges, just the security blanket society clings to by having untrainted people check sigs.
In Atlanta, there were no facilities in the central city where people could go to get the ID.
Technically, we have an open primary. you are not required to officially join a party to vote in its primary.
This all smacks a little too much of "Show me your papers!"
I would like Rep. Stephens to show me which elections were won by fraud. Even in recounted elections that were close, I haven't heard a big cry of voter fraud in Illinois.
Oh, wait. Those were all tactics conservatives already tried to suppress the minority vote.
Hello? It's 2006. Why aren't more people calling this what it is -- a blatant attempt at racist voter suppression. Welcome to desegregation Rep. Stephens.
People who don't own cars don't have to be particularly vigilant about renewing their drivers licenses.
My guess is that people with expired IDs won't be able to vote even though it's perfectly clear who there are and where they live.
In my mind this is not an acceptable outcome.
Also, who said you needed to have a state ID in this country. If you don't drive and don't need one for booze or cigarettes, why should you be discriminated against at the polling place?
Besides, the victims of fraud by the Dem Machine is far more often independent and progressive Dems in primaries than Republicans in general elections.
When was the last time the Dem Machine--people like George W. Bush's b-day host--cheated Republicans in the general election?
Bob Delaney, the Democrat County Clerk of St. Clair County, is actually on record supporting Rep. Stephens' idea. Yes, a democrat supports the idea.
It might be easy in other parts of the state to say that this proposal disenfranchises "honest" voters, but the fact is that, in 2004 in East St. Louis, voter fraud occurred and elections were influenced.
In 2004, every voter in St. Clair County was defrauded by the illegal actions of a few. People were paid $5 per vote. Period. People have gone to jail for the antics that occurred. Where's the outrage from good government groups outside our area? Talk about hypocrisy and insincerity.
The best quote I saw in our local media regarding this story talked about the necessity of photo IDs in the most basic consumer functions of society. No one's complaining about banks asking for photo IDs. No one on this blog would just sit back if someone walked into their bank and withdrew money from their account. The same people who would say that voters are "disenfranchised" would be yelling at a bank president for not having asked for a photo ID.
How can our country be the leader of the free world and yet still fail in the most basic tenets of democracy?
arguing for something that will have no discernible effect on voter fraud is a weak argument. noting that this proposal has a considerable downside (i'd call it an unintended consequence, but i don't think it's unintended) is nothing more than blowing holes through that weak argument. one observes that not a single example has been given of vote fraud that would be prevented by this...
Then get off your ass and go vote!!! I support democracy. But I don't think democracy should make exceptions for people who can't vote or wouldn't normally vote. That would be demoCRAZY.
You get up to early!!!
#2-if voter fraud is already such a problem, how difficult would it be for the crooked to create 1,000's of "fake ID's"? Computer technology can allow anyone with basic skills to place their face on anyone elses body--and bar codes? Tiger Direct sells 'em cheap.
#3-pharmacists do have to post a valid license at their place of business, too bad Stephens no longer has one to post.
It's government officials and campaign staffers, not individuals, who commit voting fraud--as happened in Madison County--and they do it in the big numbers. Far from being a remedy, Voter ID is just more officially-committed vote-fraud.
Obtaining a state-issued Voter ID is neither "free" nor "easy." Most voters who lack driver's licenses are elderly, or poor, or disabled. They'd find it hard to get to a license facility, unless they have good public transportation. In many cases, they'd have to take time off work--or hire a babysitter--just to stand in line. Plus they usually need a Birth Certificate, which costs money and takes time to obtain. (Missouri officials had been delaying the issuance of Birth Certificates for as long as 8 months...until that state's Voter ID law was shot down in the courts a week or two ago. Do you think that delay was a coincidence?)
Anyone who claims these laws aren't designed to discourage voters--especially black or poor voters--is either out of touch with human nature or a Republican. Oops, I just committed a redundancy!