Regarding the National Center attack on the Brennan Center's study "Citizens without Proof." The National Center draws on a critique from the Heritage Center that has been refuted point by point by the Brennan Center. What's more, "Citizens without Proof" has been substantiated by a number of other reliable studies:
The 2001 Carter-For…
Regarding the National Center attack on the Brennan Center's study "Citizens without Proof." The National Center draws on a critique from the Heritage Center that has been refuted point by point by the Brennan Center. What's more, "Citizens without Proof" has been substantiated by a number of other reliable studies:
The 2001 Carter-Ford Commission on Election Reform found that between 6 and 11 percent of voting-age citizens lack driver’s licenses or alternate state-issued photo IDs.[2]
A 2007 Indiana survey found that roughly 13 percent of registered Indiana voters lack an Indiana driver’s license or an alternate Indiana-issued photo ID. [3]
A 2009 study in Indiana found that of the citizen adult population, 81.4% of all white eligible adults had access to a driver’s license, compared to only 55.2% of black eligible adults. It also found that strict photo ID requirements have the greatest impact on the elderly, racial and ethnic minorities, immigrants, those with less educational attainment and lower incomes. [4]
A 2007 report based on exit polls from the 2006 elections in California, New Mexico, and Washington State found that 12% of actual voters did not have a valid driver’s license.[5]
A prominent national survey conducted after the November 2008 election found that 95% of respondents claimed to have a driver’s license, but that 16% of those respondents lacked a license that was both current and valid.[6]
The National Center for Policy research has a long history of being funded by and supportive of Big Tobacco and the Fossil Fuel Industries:
"Internal Philip Morris documents described the NCPPR as one of the tobacco company’s “national allies”,3 whose focus is on “alerting the public to the dangers of big government in environmental, health care and other issues”.4
What's more, Lonesome, I have no problem with photo ID requirements. I have long favored a National photo ID that would resolve both issues relating to voter certification and
employment verification. It's been conservatives who have opposed such identification from the time that Barbara Jordan proposed such a system back in the 1970.
The attack on democracy from the right involves far more than photo ID laws. Consider this:
" Republican lawmakers this year passed an unprecedented bevy of bills targeting the authority of state and local election officials, a power grab that might allow partisan legislators to overturn future election results by claiming there was fraud.
"GOP legislators in at least 14 states have enacted 23 new laws that empower state officials to take control of county election boards, strip secretaries of state of their executive authority, or make local election officials criminally or financially liable for even technical errors, according to Protect Democracy, a left-leaning Washington, D.C.-based voting rights nonprofit.
That article was published more than a year ago. Since then other states have joined the assault on democratic elections and "we the people." In my original comment that you challenged, I claimed that some 20 states have passed such laws -- laws that are far more restrictive than photo ID. I await any evidence that my statement was false or inaccurate. Have a nice day.
My daughter was born in 2001.....which means she is 21 now! If you're going to cite something from 2001, we are going to ignore you. If you want our attention, tell me now how many states won't provide an ID to everyone regardless of ability to pay.
I read your Pew piece and I see the Brennan Center is quoted as are other very left leaning entities. Tell me what's wrong with this: "A similar proposal in Texas would make it a felony for county election officials to mail out unsolicited absentee ballot applications. In May, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, signed into law a measure that would fine county supervisors up to $25,000 for leaving ballot drop boxes unattended.
In Arkansas, Republican lawmakers passed a law that allows the state legislature to investigate county election offices for suspected election fraud. This could lead to the decertification of county election officials, a takeover of county election offices by the State Board of Elections and a fine of up to $1,000 against county officials."
You don't make any sound arguments. You simply don't like tightening of elections. As I said, I used to live in IL where only because of dead people voting in Chicago, did John F. Kennedy become the President of the United States.
Regarding the National Center attack on the Brennan Center's study "Citizens without Proof." The National Center draws on a critique from the Heritage Center that has been refuted point by point by the Brennan Center. What's more, "Citizens without Proof" has been substantiated by a number of other reliable studies:
The 2001 Carter-Ford Commission on Election Reform found that between 6 and 11 percent of voting-age citizens lack driver’s licenses or alternate state-issued photo IDs.[2]
A 2007 Indiana survey found that roughly 13 percent of registered Indiana voters lack an Indiana driver’s license or an alternate Indiana-issued photo ID. [3]
A 2009 study in Indiana found that of the citizen adult population, 81.4% of all white eligible adults had access to a driver’s license, compared to only 55.2% of black eligible adults. It also found that strict photo ID requirements have the greatest impact on the elderly, racial and ethnic minorities, immigrants, those with less educational attainment and lower incomes. [4]
A 2007 report based on exit polls from the 2006 elections in California, New Mexico, and Washington State found that 12% of actual voters did not have a valid driver’s license.[5]
A prominent national survey conducted after the November 2008 election found that 95% of respondents claimed to have a driver’s license, but that 16% of those respondents lacked a license that was both current and valid.[6]
https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/citizens-without-proof-stands-strong
The National Center for Policy research has a long history of being funded by and supportive of Big Tobacco and the Fossil Fuel Industries:
"Internal Philip Morris documents described the NCPPR as one of the tobacco company’s “national allies”,3 whose focus is on “alerting the public to the dangers of big government in environmental, health care and other issues”.4
What's more, Lonesome, I have no problem with photo ID requirements. I have long favored a National photo ID that would resolve both issues relating to voter certification and
employment verification. It's been conservatives who have opposed such identification from the time that Barbara Jordan proposed such a system back in the 1970.
The attack on democracy from the right involves far more than photo ID laws. Consider this:
" Republican lawmakers this year passed an unprecedented bevy of bills targeting the authority of state and local election officials, a power grab that might allow partisan legislators to overturn future election results by claiming there was fraud.
"GOP legislators in at least 14 states have enacted 23 new laws that empower state officials to take control of county election boards, strip secretaries of state of their executive authority, or make local election officials criminally or financially liable for even technical errors, according to Protect Democracy, a left-leaning Washington, D.C.-based voting rights nonprofit.
https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2021/07/28/republican-legislators-curb-authority-of-county-state-election-officials
That article was published more than a year ago. Since then other states have joined the assault on democratic elections and "we the people." In my original comment that you challenged, I claimed that some 20 states have passed such laws -- laws that are far more restrictive than photo ID. I await any evidence that my statement was false or inaccurate. Have a nice day.
My daughter was born in 2001.....which means she is 21 now! If you're going to cite something from 2001, we are going to ignore you. If you want our attention, tell me now how many states won't provide an ID to everyone regardless of ability to pay.
I read your Pew piece and I see the Brennan Center is quoted as are other very left leaning entities. Tell me what's wrong with this: "A similar proposal in Texas would make it a felony for county election officials to mail out unsolicited absentee ballot applications. In May, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, signed into law a measure that would fine county supervisors up to $25,000 for leaving ballot drop boxes unattended.
In Arkansas, Republican lawmakers passed a law that allows the state legislature to investigate county election offices for suspected election fraud. This could lead to the decertification of county election officials, a takeover of county election offices by the State Board of Elections and a fine of up to $1,000 against county officials."
You don't make any sound arguments. You simply don't like tightening of elections. As I said, I used to live in IL where only because of dead people voting in Chicago, did John F. Kennedy become the President of the United States.
https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/elections/federal-judge-upholds-georgia-election-integrity-practices-deals-blow?utm_source=breaking&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter