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    tomder55's Avatar
    tomder55 Posts: 1,742, Reputation: 346
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    #1

    Jun 9, 2014, 05:48 PM
    Voter ID update
    Mississippi’s new voter ID law got its first run in the June 3 primary, and the sky did not fall. Despite the tiresome and disproven claims by opponents that such laws cause wholesale voter disenfranchisement and are intended to suppress votes, Mississippi “sailed through” its first test of the new ID requirements, according to The Clarion Ledger, the newspaper of Jackson, Miss.
    Aside from being able to use any form of government-issued photo ID, like every other state with ID requirements, Mississippi provides a free ID for anyone who does not already have a government-issued photo ID. Contrary to the claims of those who say large numbers of Americans don’t have an ID, Mississippi estimated that only 0.8 percent of Mississippians lacked an ID. In fact, even that may have been an overestimate since the state had to issue only about 1,000 voter ID cards. All those who forgot their ID on Tuesday also could vote by an affidavit as long as they returned and showed an ID within five days.
    The Clarion Ledger reported how few problems there were in the implementation of the new requirement. Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann said the state “devoted countless hours of time and training to election officials across the state” and the result was that there were hardly any complaints. There was only one reported case of a man mistakenly being turned away for lack of an ID, at which point an election commissioner was sent to solve the problem. But this was one of the few reported problems across the entire state in which almost 400,000 voters turned out to cast their ballots in the primary elections, including in the fiercely contested Republican U.S. Senate primary where incumbent Thad Cochran faced off against challenger Chris McDaniel in a razor-thin election.
    As Sid Salter from the Clarion Ledger put it, the voter ID law was a “non-event” and “voters expressed little, if any, inconvenience at the polls due to the new law.” So how is the new law being covered by the media? Instead of reporting that the voter ID law is “sailing through,” the mainstream media has instead elected to remain silent. As Hosemann said, “No news is good news.”
    Mississippi Voter ID Implemented With No Problems

    Mississippi sails through voter ID test
    smoothy's Avatar
    smoothy Posts: 25,492, Reputation: 2853
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    #2

    Jun 9, 2014, 06:43 PM
    I'm guessing there are going to be a lot of dead people upset when they show up at the polls this year. The zombie vote isn't going to be be represented. The ACLU will probibly be taking up the fight against anti-zombie legislation.
    ebaines's Avatar
    ebaines Posts: 12,131, Reputation: 1307
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    #3

    Jun 10, 2014, 09:37 AM
    It will be interesting to see if such "non-news" continues with the general election in November. More than 5 times as many Republicans voted in the primary as Democrats (the Dems had apparently had a yawner of a race, with very low turn out), so I would expect there will be a higher turnout in the general election, especially from poorer neighborhoods.

    Don't epect those who oppose voter ID laws to go away - they would likely argue that even if there were few issues at the polls themselves on election day, voter ID laws may have kept people away entirely. How do you count how many people didn't bother going to the polls who otherwise would have, but for the voter ID law?

    Personally I think it's a huge non-issue. No one has ever shown that voter fraud has been a systemic problem that needs fixing, and no one has ever shown that voter ID laws keep people away from the polls, as long as free voter ID cards are made easily available to those who need them.
    smoothy's Avatar
    smoothy Posts: 25,492, Reputation: 2853
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    #4

    Jun 10, 2014, 09:46 AM
    Um... yes they have... there was a group recently comparing votor roles between 28 states that provided them and in VA alone there were over 14,000 cases where people were illegally registered to vote in more than one state, every instance is a crime. And there were significant numbers in every one of the states checked.

    Every country on the planet requires votor ID at the polls. THe only argument against id is to fascilitate votor fraud by the people opposing it. Nobody gets free handouts without an ID... so even poor people have ID's. Voter ID keeps people honest... and not voting multiple times.
    speechlesstx's Avatar
    speechlesstx Posts: 1,111, Reputation: 284
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    #5

    Jun 10, 2014, 10:07 AM
    I'm sure the race baiters are desperately trolling for a "victim", and if they don't find one they'll make it up.
    speechlesstx's Avatar
    speechlesstx Posts: 1,111, Reputation: 284
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    #6

    Jun 10, 2014, 10:10 AM
    A quick Google news search and voila, Robert Reich is already regurgitating the same old crap.
    talaniman's Avatar
    talaniman Posts: 54,327, Reputation: 10855
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    #7

    Jun 10, 2014, 10:25 AM
    Not every voter who moves from state to state and changes jurisdictions is a criminal. Look forward to your links that say they are intent on fraud.
    speechlesstx's Avatar
    speechlesstx Posts: 1,111, Reputation: 284
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    #8

    Jun 10, 2014, 10:59 AM
    One is too many. That one disenfranchises ME.
    smoothy's Avatar
    smoothy Posts: 25,492, Reputation: 2853
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    #9

    Jun 10, 2014, 11:00 AM
    One of your Democrat Elected officials Democratic congressional candidate Wendy Rosen voted in both Maryland and Floridavoted on TWO states and admitted it.

    Candidate Wendy Rosen caught voting twice - Baltimore Sun

    She was far from being the only one....
    tomder55's Avatar
    tomder55 Posts: 1,742, Reputation: 346
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    #10

    Jun 10, 2014, 11:05 AM
    as long as free voter ID cards are made easily available to those who need them.
    exactly .
    No one has ever shown that voter fraud has been a systemic problem that needs fixing,
    No smoking gun ? Perhaps ,but there are many people convinced that the Chicago vote (fraud ) swung the 1960 election to JFK.
    smoothy's Avatar
    smoothy Posts: 25,492, Reputation: 2853
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    #11

    Jun 10, 2014, 11:21 AM
    And a lefty rag publishing a story on this... The Washington Post...

    Virginia AG to investigate possible ‘duplicate voting’ - The Washington Post

    RICHMOND — The Virginia attorney general's office said Thursday that it is investigating “several possible cases of duplicate voting” uncovered after a comparison of the commonwealth's registration rolls against voter lists in 21 other states. State Board of Elections spokeswoman Nikki Sheridan said the board requested the investigation Wednesday. The probe was prompted by results of a voter registration database check that turned up more than 308,000 duplicate registrations in Virginia.

    Of those, more than 97,000 were listed as having voted in recent elections in Virginia.

    ..............
    smoothy's Avatar
    smoothy Posts: 25,492, Reputation: 2853
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    #12

    Jun 10, 2014, 11:33 AM
    Another in North Carolina with four legislators registered to vote in multiple states..

    Four state legislators among “duplicate voters” assumed to be cases of voter fraud

    And those are just the big names... there are thousands of people that aren't well known or elected officials.

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