Voter Fraud. Fact or Fiction?

in #voterid4 years ago

This is an issue I've written about for nine years.

Voter Fraud, Fact or Fiction.

Only citizens are allowed to vote in elections on the Federal, State, and Local levels in the U.S. Election officials have an obligation to the best of their abilities to ensure that the voters’ rolls are without error.

Voters are kept on the voter rolls, each time they vote in an election. In this day and age of a more mobile society, the voter rolls are likely less accurate and election clerks don’t have the resources to ensure voter roll accuracy.

What are the current Voter ID requirements?

  • 21 states have no voter ID law.
  • 16 states have require some form of ID to vote.
  • 7 states require a photo ID to vote.
  • 8 states have a strict photo ID requirement to vote.

The states that have voter ID requirements, will accept a utility bill or bank statment with the voter’s name and address. Those states that require a photo ID, voters are asked for a photo ID. If unable to provide a photo ID, the voters are allowed to vote by meeting other criteria or being vouched for by another voter with a photo ID. States that have strict photo ID requirements will allow voters who are unable to produce a photo ID to vote via a provisional ballot. That ballot is validated upon the voters return to show a photo ID.

Those groups who are opposed to having voters show a photo ID state that this requirement is an undue burden on potential voters and limits their access to the polls. Our daily activities that require a photo ID include, buying alcohol, boarding an airplane, buying cigarettes, cashing a check, going to the movies, picking up medication, renting cars, using food stamps to name just a few.

Having a photo ID for voting is a standard to which we should strive, and ensuring that the process so that everyone who qualifies to vote has a photo ID should be easy to accomplish. Our election officials need to be preventing election fraud and not having to react after the fact.

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The US Founders understood that different states would have different voting laws.

Having different voting laws in different states is problematic for national elections because the different laws would effect voter turn out.

The founders set up a system where the Federal Government would hold a census every ten years. The census would determine the number of electorates per state.

The point of the Electoral College was to create a system that would allow the different states to experiment with different voting ideas.

When people talk about Electoral College, they usually focus on the fact that the system magnifies the input of small states.

However, I wish people would spend more time pointing out that the true purpose of the system was to allow local control of the voting system.

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