The Original Rock the Vote

The Original Rock the Vote

Despite the best efforts of Senator Joe Haynes, Senator Lowe Finney, and Senator Thelma Harper, a bill requiring photo IDs to vote (SB0150) was passed out of the Tennessee Senate State and Local Government Committee. The final vote was 6-3 along party lines.

I couldn’t have covered the committee meeting any better than Woods at the Scene. Tom Humphrey of the Knox News Sentinel and Cara Kumari of WSMV have more. And as always, there’s big discussion going on over at a Kleinheider Joint.

In light of the party line vote, and recent on air discussions we’ve had about empathy, I have a few questions for those out there sitting in their ivory towers:

  1. Have you ever had to take time off work and been told “no” repeatedly by your boss?
  2. Have you ever not been able to take time off from one of your jobs because you’re paid hourly and you desperately need every dollar you make from every hour you work to be able to take care of your family?
  3. Do you get a scheduled lunch that lasts 30 minutes?
  4. Are you in a wheelchair for any reason? Confined to your home or your bed, perhaps?
  5. How’s your moms? Is she ambulatory? Does she have a driver’s license? A photo ID? Can she locate her birth record?
  6. Do you know any nuns? What about any elderly nuns who have taken a vow of poverty?
  7. Have you ever needed to use public transportation because you didn’t own a car? Have you ever noticed that it sometimes takes almost twice as long to get from point A to point B if you ride the bus? (refer to questions 1, 2 & 3)

If you want participatory democracy to be equitable and still require Photo IDs to vote, then make them free and easily accessible for everyone. Perhaps we can put a voter registration and picture booth in every grocery and convenient store in town and staff them 24/7 (for you know, people who work the third shift – oh, by the way, have you ever had to work the third shift?).

Huh. Voter registration booths in every grocery and convenient store. Now that’s a fiscal note I’d like to see attached to ol’ SB0150.

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The Tennessee State Senate State and Local Government Committee meets tomorrow, Tuesday, March 3, at 8:30 am, in Legislative Plaza, Room 12, to discuss eight Voter ID bills that will in effect place a poll tax on voting in Tennessee.

Excuse me, sir, did you show your ID before you got that purple finger?

Excuse me, sir, did you show your photo ID before you got that purple finger?

These eight bills were all introduced by Republicans – the Party of preventing the vote – in an effort to fulfill Lt. Governor Ron Ramsey’s post-election day promise to give “new life” to certain issues including “‘pro-business issues’, 2nd Amendment issues, abortion issues, and illegal immigration issues… voter ID specifically and SJR 127.”

SB0150 and SB1681 by Bill Ketron (R-Murfreesboro), as well as SB0587 by Mae Beavers (R-Mt. Juliet) and SB0191 by Dewayne Bunch (R-Cleveland) would make showing”qualified photographic identification” at the polls before voting mandatory. SB0173 and SB0886 by Senator Ketron, and SB0194 by Senator Bunch “requires citizenship status to be proven prior to registration to vote and requires certain procedures to ensure identity and citizenship status prior to voting.”

While on the surface these bills may seem like a good idea, they are really a solution in search of a problem and will actually do more to disenfranchise voters than maintain the integrity of our elections.

The Brennan Center of Justice has studied the issue of voter fraud extensively and have concluded that someone is more likely to be hit by lightning than commit voter fraud. They also analyzed the more than 250 claims of fraud in the Supreme Court’s photo ID case and found that there was “not one proven case of a fraudulent vote that the challenged law could prevent.”

In 2007, the Election Assistance Commission, the federal panel responsible for conducting election research, altered their findings so they could report that “the pervasiveness of fraud was open to debate.”

From October 2002 to September 2005, the Justice Department indicted only 40 voters for registration fraud or illegal voting, 21 of whom were noncitizens and during the same time period, only 95 defendants were charged with federal election-fraud-related crimes in the whole country.

Remember the U.S. Attorney General scandal? All because the justice department tried to force State AG’s into ferreting out non-existent cases of voter fraud.

And take Texas’ Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott who “declared war on what he claimed was rampant vote fraud in Texas” and “set up a special vote fraud unit and got a $1.4 million grant from the feds for the work.” That was in 2006. In 2008, the Dallas Morning News reported on the results of his efforts – 26 cases, all involving Democrats, and almost all involving minorities.

Even the federal court of appeals judge who wrote the majority decision upholding an Indiana voter identification law enacted in 2005 said, “As far as anyone knows…no one in Indiana, and not many people elsewhere, are known to have been prosecuted for impersonating a registered voter.”

Between 13 and 22 million people in the United States do not have a photo id. A disproportionately large number of them are elderly and in poverty. These bills have the potential of disenfranchising thousands of people in this state alone.

It’s already happened to the poor, the elderly, and the poor, elderly nuns in other states.

Members of the Senate State and Local Government Committee:

Bill Ketron (R-Murfreesboro, the fightin’ 13th), Chair, Lowe Finney (D-Jackson), Vice Chair, Joe Haynes (D-Goodlettsville), Secretary, Tim Burchett (R-Knoxville), Mike Faulk (R-Church Hill), Thelma Harper (D-Nashville), Mark Norris (R-Collierville), Jim Tracy (R-Shelbyville), Ken Yager (R-Harriman)

Please call and email to tell them to just say no to these bills.

UPDATE: Goldni asks a great question over at a Kleinheider joint. Will the act of obtaining a photo create even more barriers:

Here’s an honest question–I would guess that most people do not register to vote at a central office, at an election commission or DMV. In election years, voter registration is often done by campaign volunteers, who distribute the forms and then mail them to the election commission. It’s convenient for voters to be able to register on the spot. Does this mean that voter registration will now have to be done in only a few locations so that pictures can be made?

That’s where I’m worried about the suppression, not so much the monetary cost. It makes it more difficult to register to vote, if there are only a few places to do so.

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I can hear the post-election cries of a stolen election now. “They cheated,” Sean Hannity will say, taking his usual kernel of truth from a news story and Hannitizing the hell out of it, “They registered a dog and Lord knows who else!”

Yes, it’s true. A cute little Bichon Frise named Captain Chito was mailed a voter registration form by the Alabama Democratic Party. It has been established that the form was never processed. What hasn’t been established is 1) who initiated the mailing and 2) what poll worker would actually give a four legged ball o’ fluff a ballot?

In other words, there are a lot of hurdles one needs to jump over (without the benefit of having four legs) to commit “voter fraud” and almost all of them are federal offenses bringing 5 years in prison and a $10,000 fine. And even though some have tried really, really hard to find and prosecute such cases, only 23 have been prosecuted since 2002 (out of millions of votes cast).

The non-partisan Brennan Center has the skinny on “voter fraud” at truthaboutfraud.org. And keep in mind, that even though dogs can have a political affiliation, they cannot vote.

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Send Lawyers, Phones, and Money

The Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and its Election Protection coalition partners are recruiting legal volunteers to staff Election Protection Hotlines across the country and work on the ground as mobile legal volunteers.

Through their phone hotlines: 1-866-OUR-VOTE (administered by the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law) and 1-888-Ve-Y-Vota (administered by the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Education Fund), their website, and field programs across the country, they provide Americans all across the country with comprehensive voter information and advice on how they can make sure their vote is counted.

If you are an attorney, law student, or paralegal, we need your help to protect the right to vote. We’re recruiting legal volunteers to staff Election Protection Hotlines across the country and work on the ground as mobile legal volunteers.

Volunteers must attend in-person a 2 hour training session and are asked to sign up for a 4 – 5 hour shift. Materials will be provided. Individuals will volunteer for both a hotline and/or Mobile Legal Volunteer shift and training directly online.

Go to nationalcampaignforfairelections.org to sign up.

For those non-lawyer types, you can help too by sponsoring the Election Protection Hotline (1-866-OUR-VOTE), which connects trained volunteers with voters in need to troubleshoot problems at the polls in real time.

(H/T Mark Crispin Miller)

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Thrown in jail for knowing the voter ID laws in Tennessee? Maybe not, but just as bad is how many will just walk out the door without voting if someone with “authority” says “You can either give me what I told you to, or you can just get out that door and find someplace else to vote!”?

BradBlog has the full story of Missouri Election Integrity Activist, Phil Lindsey, of ShowMeTheVote.org, the victim of needless intimidation and unlawful disenfranchisement, who was arrested for having the right form of ID while attempting to vote in his state’s primary on Tuesday:

This story is unfrickin’-believable. Or maybe it isn’t. It took place in Thor Hearne country, after all. And though she didn’t get arrested and thrown in jail, a similar incident happened to the Missouri Secretary of State during the 2006 election.

A voter in Kansas City on Tuesday — one I happen to know, because he’s an Election Integrity advocate in the Show Me State — was arrested and sent to jail after he refused to show a driver’s license at the polling place before attempting to vote during the state’s Primary Election.

As user “galloglas,” Phil posted the unnerving details at DemocraticUnderground.com.

Or course, the official charge couldn’t be, “He knew what kind of ID he needed to vote legally,” so they slapped him with “disturbance/disorderly conduct…acts in a violent or tumultuous manner toward another, placing such person(s) in fear of safety by refusing to show proper I.D. when voting.”

Also over at BradBlog, links to local news coverage of the incident and similar stories experienced by the Missouri Secretary of State and Brad’s dad – two very nice people.

“Show-me” State Missouri needs a new slogan: The “Show-Me the ID I want Regardless of the Law or Get Thrown in the Hoosegow” State. Wordy, I know, but if the slogan fits…

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