Voter ID Laws: Necessary to combat rampant fraud or subtle subjugation of the Democratic demographic

Obvious is obvious.

First checked with an immigration attorney and they couldn’t answer whether a state ID of driver’s license displays a non-citizen status, so I called PENNDOT (Pennsylvania Department of Transportation). According to Monica, the lady with which I spoke, neither ID bears any indication of citizenship.

(cross-posted in “Yes, you DO have to show that voter fraud is actually happening” thread

You have absolutely no evidence of that whatsoever.

I’ll contribute what I always contribute in these threads.

I’m always fascinated by the “it’s impossible to give everyone an ID” crowd. In my (poor country) everyone has an ID card (and, since a couple of years ago even minors get one).
It costs very little and you get it for free in poor areas. If you have no birth certificate (especially in areas where terrorists destroyed records) an simple affidavit ( with a witness a priest, chief opf police, teacher) or some other document (school certificate) are enough.
If piss-poor people in 20-person hamlets at 4000 m.a.s.l and 3 day’s donkey ride can get an ID it’s ridiculous to say inner city people can’t.
Also, voting places have the list of voters with pictures so fraud is reduced to a minimum.

Sounds like you all recognize one another on sight, so the ID is redundant.

There are a few more people here than there.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/05/09/2791674/state-finds-nearly-2700-foreigners.html

BTW, I got a letter today from the supervisor of elections asking me to update my signature on my registration. I was wondering when that would show up. I don’t know what people are bitching about. It came with postage paid envelope. It is nothing compared to digging out my social security card and my birth certificate when I had to renew my drivers license. Of course, the really hard part is that they made me take the eye exam again. It also turned out that they don’t accept Visa, only Mastercard.

http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2012-06-06/news/os-voter-signature-demand-20120606_1_absentee-ballots-absentee-voters-voter-registration-drives

So it is not on the driver’s license, right? Do polling places have access to this database? Do they access the database for every voter?

I already explained I don’t know. It could be encoded in the bar code or the magnetic strip or it could in special database the registers use. If they put ‘Alien’ in plain text on the front of the driver license, then they would be a privacy violation since that bouncer at a bar or the checker at Winn-Dixie doesn’t need to know your citizenship status.

I suspect a database since they already have one to check if a drivers license is valid. I looked earlier today and my license is valid and it turned out that the state of Florida has unclaimed property in my name. I checked and I got over $1600 dollars coming to me.

Re: Voter ID impact on eligible voters

For an examination on how they got that 11% figure - and how “its principal findings have been repeatedly confirmed by multiple independent studies,” click over to “Citizens Without Proof”.

So this should puts a number on how many people Voter ID laws affect. And whom it affects.

I think it’s neat that the discussion came to undocumented immigrants voting… Because Voter ID is not really good for checking that… And it’s possible to check it without Voter ID… And when states do check into it, they often find the problem to be marginal… And when they act on things, they often threaten many legal voters from being removed from the rolls…

Has anyone done a study of how many registered voters lack government ID? I wonder how many of the cited 11% have ever voted.

What is giving them extra hurdles then? An incentive program?

Tough love, Republican style.

I was always told if you think love hurts, you’re in an abusive relationship.

No they check it when you register, not when you vote. :rolleyes:

Are you claiming you don’t know that?

That’s not what the law says.

Lima, my city, has 8 million people. Very few cities in the states have larger populations.

Seems like you missed the point by a light-year, though.

I think your point was that if you can give everyone IDs, we should be able to as well.

You missed my point. Your country has a population that is 10% that of the US.

I said that they check citizenship when we register in Florida. If you have a cite that they actually check citizenship every time we vote in Florida instead of just checking ID, then you need to provide it.

So if they check citizenship when you register, why do voters need a driver’s license or passport when they vote? Any credible identification that establishes identity as that of a registered voter will satisfy that. A photo student ID issued by a state university certainly meets that requirement, yet they are specifically omitted from many voter ID laws. Why, if not for voter suppression?

Where do students establish residency? A student ID does not imply residency. As a college student, I never voted in my college town; I always voted in my home town.

Does a student ID show address?