"Voter fraud" vs. practical, simple voting solutions
I hope Amanda doesn't mind, but I'll need this for later use:
The Fraud of "voter fraud"
Everything was supposed to change after Bush v. Gore. Never again would the outcome of a presidential election be left in the hands of nine Supreme Court justices who issued their opinion amid nation-wide questions of "hanging chads" and "butterfly ballots." In its opinion, the court said it anticipated "legislative bodies nationwide" would "examine ways to improve the mechanisms and machinery for voting" in order to avoid a repeat of the 2000 recount disaster.Seven years later, however, local, state, and federal governments have failed to fix these flawed voting "mechanisms," leaving the country with low-quality voter registration databases and inadequate safeguards for maintaining voter rolls. It takes a hacker just one minute to break into an electronic voting machine.
Yet many conservatives have turned their backs on these institutional problems and instead focused their hostilities on individual voters. With reports of rampant "voter fraud" from by organizations of questionable credibility, conservatives have imagined hordes of nefarious undocumented immigrants casting ballots under fake names. As a consequence, the right has touted voter ID laws as a way to improve the electoral system. Exactly as the Supreme Court envisioned, right?
Wrong. These regulations have instead created a solution for a non-existent problem, preventing legitimate voters from casting ballots. Voter fraud has become right-wing code for suppressing minority and liberal voters.
On Wednesday, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments challenging Indiana's voter ID law, the most restrictive in the nation. Since 2005, residents have been required to show a government-issued photo ID before voting at a polling place or even casting an absentee ballot. Voters without such IDs may cast a provisional ballot on election day, but only if 10 days later, they file an affidavit claiming indigence or a religious objection to being photographed. Indiana's Republican-controlled General Assembly passed the law on a party-line vote, and it was later signed by Republican governor Mitch Daniels.
This case, Crawford v. Marion County Election Board, is one of the most important on the electoral process to come before the court in recent times. But legal experts aren't expecting too many surprises. Unless the case is thrown out, the justices will likely break down into their ideological fault lines, as in Bush v. Gore. "I think what you're seeing is the typical split," notes Tova Wang, an election reform expert at The Century Foundation. "You have the 4-4 liberal-conservative split, with Justice Anthony Kennedy as the swing vote."
Kennedy has already indicated that he will likely side with the court's conservatives and vote to uphold Indiana's law. "You want us to invalidate a statute on the ground that it's a minor inconvenience to a small percentage of voters?" Kennedy asked Paul Smith, who argued the case for the Indiana Democratic Party. Justice Antonin Scalia wondered why the court should "wash away the whole statute" to remedy the "inconvenience to a small number of people." Indiana Solicitor General Thomas Fisher tried to argue to the justices that only "an infinitesimal portion of the electorate could even be, conceivably be, burdened by" the law.
Voter ID laws, however, affect more than an "infinitesimal" number of Americans and are more than a "minor inconvenience." According to the federal government, there are as many as 21 million voting-age Americans without driver's licenses. In Indiana, 13 percent of registered voters lack the documents needed to obtain a license, and therefore, cast a ballot. These restrictions disproportionately hit low-income, minority, handicapped, and elderly voters the hardest, leading to lower levels of voter participation.
Those affected also tend to vote Democratic, which may explain why Karl Rove and his colleagues have pursued so-called voter fraud with such zeal. Several U.S. attorneys ousted in the Bush administration's infamous prosecutor purge even alleged that they were fired because they refused to aggressively prosecute baseless voter fraud claims.
Labels: 2008 elections, Electronic voting


1 Comments:
I can understand outrage about preventing people from voting, but when people don't go through the process so that they can vote, isn't that their responsibility?
When I got my license, I had to show some kind of ID that says this is who I am. The law that says you need certain forms of requisite ID seems to be there to ensure that illegal aliens aren't getting government identification cards--and therefore not allowing terrorists to easily get US id cards. I think that this view is already supported by anyone here.
But as far as voter fraud goes, why should I be allowed to vote because the utility company says I pay a water bill? How is that ensuring the only one vote is cast by one person? Anybody can produce and print a fake and no one would ever know. I really don't think that going out to get your birth certificate, social security number, and something that says you're a resident (like a school report card, marriage certificate, insurance card, and about two dozen other things) is all that hard. You have a whole year to do it!
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