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Sunday, January 06, 2008
Fighting Vote Fraud With Photo ID
By Robert Bluey
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All eyes will be on New Hampshire Wednesday morning for the first true primary in the 2008 elections. But even as hardy New Englanders trudge to the polls, something at least as consequential will happening in Washington, D.C., where the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in a major case on election law.

In Crawford v. Marion County Election Board and Indiana Democratic Party v. Rokita, the court will tackle the issue of vote fraud. The arguments will revive the debate over voter disenfranchisement that raged after the contested presidential election of 2000.

This time the controversy surrounds Indiana’s requirement that voters show photo identification when they cast their ballot. At a time when Americans are asked to show photo ID for routine things such as buying alcohol or getting on an airplane, it hardly seems unreasonable to do the same before voting. There’s also overwhelming public support for voter ID requirements; Rasmussen puts the number at 77 percent approval nationally.

In Indiana, however, a coalition of left-leaning groups -- led by the state Democratic Party and ACLU -- has brought suit against the state, claiming that requiring photo ID at polling places disenfranchises low-income citizens, minorities and seniors -- constituencies considered key to Democratic electoral success..

Claims of disenfranchisement have been rebutted in numerous studies of voter ID requirements. The most recent, a statistical analysis completed by The Heritage Foundation in September, flatly concluded that voter ID laws don’t depress voter turnout.

“Voter identification laws largely do not have the claimed negative impact on voter turnout based on state-to-state comparisons,” David B. Muhlhausen and Keri Weber Sikich wrote in the Heritage study. “In general, respondents in photo identification and non-photo identification states are just as likely to report voting compared to respondents from states that only required voters to state their name.”

The argument taking place on Wednesday will have a dramatic impact on voter ID requirements throughout the country. The court must determine whether the Help America Vote Act (HAVA) of 2002, passed in the wake of Bush v. Gore, allowed states to adopt more stringent requirements (as in the case of Indiana) or created a “ceiling” limiting their ability to implement anti-fraud provisions.

Leading Republicans and Democrats have already weighed in. About 35 congressional Republicans filed a friend-of-the-court brief stating that when they helped enact HAVA, they fully intended to give states the leeway to set their own rules. Indiana took advantage in 2005 and approved the photo ID requirement.

At the time of passage, HAVA was hailed as groundbreaking because it represented congressional acknowledgement that vote fraud was a problem in America. The law primarily addressed voter registration issues, leaving it up to the states to set their own rules for administering elections. Specifically, it required states to keep a voter-registration database, mandated that anyone who registers to vote provide a driver’s license or Social Security number, and stipulated that anyone registering by mail must provide a photo ID. Continued...

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About The Author
Robert B. Bluey is director of the Center for Media & Public Policy at The Heritage Foundation and maintains a blog at RobertBluey.com
 
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Subject: I absolutely agree
The first time I ever got to vote I had to produce a photo ID(my drivers license) and my voter registration card for the election official, and she was my next door neighbor who's known me all of my life.
She said that it was just the law and it also helped make sure that I was in the right polling station.
Sure I thought it was dumb since she'd known me so long. But there are a lot of other potential voters that she didn't know and it just helps make the whole process go smoother.
Aside from eliminating the chance that any poodles, or residents of our city cemetary get to vote.
And we all know that one party has dead people voting in every election.

Here we go again
I guess this will be a repeat of the Ken Blackwell column of a few days ago. So here is a basic summary of the argument.

There is no logical reason to oppose voter ID requirements except the argument in favor of the very thing that it is designed to combat, voting fraud. So, in effect, every time you see some Democrat arguing against this requirement, what you are really seeing is an argument in favor of making voter fraud easier.

The Lames argue that a picture ID is discriminatory against the poor who don’t drive and therefore do not have a driver’s license. Anyone with any common sense what so ever knows this argument has no merit. The laws being argued do not require a driver’s license; they require an ID with a picture on it. Poor people already have a picture ID to collect State assistance. If they do not have one, the State will provide one for FREE. So ends the logical arguments.

cont...
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