Friday, August 16, 2013

Voting
Restrictions Passed in 2013. 
Arkansas
Photo ID required to vote (legislature overrode gubernatorial veto)
Indiana
Authorizes challengers to demand proof of identification
Montana
Referendum to repeal Election Day Registration, placed on the ballot for 2014
Nebraska
Reduces the early voting period
North Carolina
Photo ID required to vote, eliminates same-day registration, eliminates pre-registration for 16- and 17-year-old citizens, reduces the early voting period.
North Dakota
Photo ID required to vote
Tennessee
More restrictive Photo ID requirement
Virginia
Photo ID required to vote
Restrictions on third party registration
Summary of Pending Restrictive Voting Legislation
  • Identification laws
    • Photo ID laws. At least 22 states have introduced legislation either requiring voters to show photo ID at the polls or making existing photo ID laws more restrictive.
    • Proof of citizenship laws. At least eight states have introduced legislation requiring proof of citizenship, such as a birth certificate, to register or vote.
  • Making voter registration harder. At least seven states have introduced bills to end Election Day or same-day voter registration, limit voter registration mobilization efforts, and reduce other registration opportunities.
  • Reducing early voting opportunities. At least seven states have introduced bills that limit existing opportunities to vote early in person.
  • Making it harder to restore voting rights. At least two states have introduced legislation that would further restrict the right to vote to persons with criminal convictions.
  • Making it harder for students to vote. At least two states have proposed legislation that would make it harder for students to register and vote.

Suppressing Democracy by Stealing the Right
to Vote Is the Ultimate Election Fraud


By Mark Karlin
Editor of BuzzFlash at Truthout

July 2012--We've seen it all before.

Passing laws to keep certain groups of people from voting, when they are entitled to in a democracy under the Constitution.

It used to be a "poll tax" in the South, where blacks were kept from voting because they didn't pay sufficient taxes. It was, of course, racist, but it also set the precedent of tying voting rights to wealth.

In the last few decades, with a new surge in the past two years--we have seen Republican controlled states pass a number of voter identification laws--with additional limitations on advance voting and restrictive residency requirements in many cases.

These new legal requirements for voting are meant to keep minorities, students, the disabled and the poorer elderly from voting, because these groups tend to lean Democratic in their affiliation.

A new study by the Brennan Center for Justice indicates that "since January 2011, partisans in 19 states have rushed through new laws that cut back on voting rights.

In a comprehensive study released last October, the Brennan Center concluded these laws could make it far harder for millions of eligible citizens to vote."

The Department of Justice has successfully challenged a few of the new voter suppression laws, but hardly enough.

Remember that if Jeb Bush and Kathryn Harris had not eliminated tens of thousands of minorities from the voting rolls in 2000, through a vetting process called caging, Al Gore--who won the popular vote in the US by half a million votes--would easily have carried Florida, instead of having the election stolen by the Supreme Court.

The right of an American citizen to vote is the fundamental ingredient that makes a democracy representative of the will of the people, of ALL US citizens.

To intentionally keep people from exercising their right to vote, in the absence of any significant voter fraud, is a crime against the Constitution.

The Brennan Center concludes:

The result is plain: Voter ID laws will make it harder for hundreds of thousands of poor Americans to vote.

They place a serious burden on a core constitutional right that should be universally available to every American citizen.

This November, restrictive voter ID states will provide 127 electoral votes--nearly half of the 270 needed to win the presidency.

Therefore, the ability of eligible citizens without photo ID to obtain one could have a major influence on the outcome of the 2012 election.

The report also notes:

Ten states now have unprecedented restrictive voter ID laws. Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin all require citizens to produce specific types of government-issued photo identification before they can cast a vote that will count.

Legal precedent requires these states to provide free photo ID to eligible voters who do not have one.

Unfortunately, these “free” IDs are not equally accessible to all voters....

More than 1 million eligible voters in these states fall below the federal poverty line and live more than 10 miles from their nearest ID-issuing office.

These voters may be particularly affected by the significant costs of the documentation required to obtain a photo ID.

Birth certificates can cost between $8 and $25. Marriage licenses, required for married women whose birth certificates include a maiden name, can cost between $8 and $20.

By comparison, the notorious poll tax, outlawed during the civil rights era, costs $10.64 in current dollars.

Make no mistake, stealing the most basic right in a democracy, the right to participate in the election of a representative government, is a thuggish form of state-sanctioned election theft.

******
And lastly...
Go Back! You Didn’t Say May I?

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Feminism is a socialist, anti-family, political movement that encourages women to leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism and become lesbians.
                                                              Pat Robertson
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WTF??