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Basic Integrity
Wed, 20 Sep 2006 11:25:18 -0700
soc.retirement
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Sordo...
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September 20, 2006, 9:25 a.m.
Basic Integrity
By The Editors
The next time you buy something at the mall with your credit card, you
may well have to show a photo ID first. So why not when you vote? This
is the question the House will take up today when it considers HR 4844,
the Federal Election Integrity Act. It would introduce two modest and
commonsensical regulations. First, that a person provide proof of U.S.
citizenship when registering to vote. Second, that a person show some
form of photo identification at the ballot box.
The federal government has a clear interest in making sure that
elections are fair, not only to ensure citizens’ right to vote, but also
to instill confidence in citizens that their leaders are legitimate. A
simple way of doing this is to require that voters present photo ID.
It’s baffling that this requirement is not already in place, given that,
according to a 2006 NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, 81 percent of
voters favor it. Indeed, 24 states already require voters to present
some form of identification when voting, and seven of these require
photo ID. Yet some of these states — Georgia, for instance — have had
their regulations overturned by the courts, underscoring the need for a
uniform federal standard.
Photo identification is required for cashing checks; it is required when
driving a car, buying alcohol, and applying for Social Security; even a
New York Public Library card cannot be gotten without presenting some
form of ID. Mexico requires voters to show photo identification. The
bipartisan Carter-Baker commission studied election reform and
recommended in September 2005 that voters be required to show photo ID.
In testimony before the House, Paul Bettencourt, tax assessor-collector
and voter registrar for Harris County, Texas, explained the difficulties
his office faces in preventing non-citizens from voting. “If a foreign
national sends in a voter-registration application and checks off that
he or she is a citizen of the United States, they will get a card —
unless we have some prior knowledge that their information is false.” As
long as we rely on nothing more than the honor system, we are
effectively inviting non-citizens to influence the American political
process for their benefit, despite the fact that they have no legitimate
claim to participation in it. With some 12 million illegals already
here, this is more than a hypothetical concern.
The most prominent objection to ID requirements is that they will
establish a burdensome obstacle to voting that will disproportionately
affect the poor. But photo identification is easily obtained, and its
practical necessity guarantees that nearly all legitimate voters already
have it. The idea that an ID requirement will keep people — poor or
otherwise — home on election day is simply implausible.
Others object that the governing of elections has traditionally been
left mostly to the states, and that HR 4844 is consequently an offense
against federalism. But this argument is also weak. In question here is
not whether Washington should be allowed to dictate in matters of state
policy, but whether it is able to secure its obvious interest in the
integrity of elections. It is precisely because the right to vote is
precious that Congress should act now to protect it.
Harry Thompson...
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Well, gee. The poor now use check cashing stores which charge a stiff fee
for cashing checks. So maybe we can have voting stores where the poor can
vote for a fee too.
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