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    The Week

    The GOP's new voting laws: Disenfranchising 5 million Americans?

    A liberal think tank warns that a Republican anti-voter-fraud campaign is really a disguised effort to freeze out Democratic voters in 2012

    A wave of new Republican-driven election laws will make it harder for millions of eligible voters to cast ballots in 2012, according to a report by New York University Law School's liberal Brennan Center for Justice. The restrictive changes — many in crucial battleground states — are so extensive that they could even tip a tight election, the liberal think tank says. Here, a brief guide to the new laws, and their potential effect:

    What do the new laws change?
    The most significant restriction requires Americans in several states to present state-issued photo IDs when they vote. The Brennan Center estimates that 3.3 million eligible voters in the affected states — Kansas, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin — don't have such IDs now. Other Americans would be affected by laws in Alabama, Texas, and Kansas requiring proof of citizenship when they register to vote, and by new restrictions on same-day voter registration in Florida, Texas, and Maine (which eliminated it entirely). Florida, Georgia, Ohio, Tennessee and West Virginia also cut back on early voting, and two states — Florida and Ohio — reversed earlier changes that had made it easier for convicted felons to recover their eligibility to vote.

    Why did Republicans implement these laws?
    The GOP made a big push to enact these laws after retaking several statehouses and governors' mansions last November. The Right says the new rules were needed to stamp out voter fraud. "There are enough proven cases in the past, throughout our history and recently, that show that you've got to take basic steps to prevent people from taking advantage of an election if they want to. Particularly close elections," says Hans von Spakovsky of the conservative Heritage Foundation, as quoted by The New York Times.

    What do Democrats say?
    The Left maintains that the election fraud problem essentially doesn't exist, and that the laws, all passed by Republicans, add up to a coordinated effort to suppress the Democratic vote. "The GOP fears losing in a fair fight," says Steve Benen at Washington Monthly, "so the party is trying to rig the game through voter suppression, plain and simple." 

    How would these laws hurt Democrats?
    Overall, the 19 laws and two executive orders in 14 states that the Brennan Center analyzed affect more than 5 million voters. That's "a number larger than the margin of victory in two of the last three presidential elections," the Brennan Center notes. The new restrictions could "sharply tilt the political terrain for the 2012 election," the think tank says, because the impact will "fall most heavily on young, minority, and low-income voters" — groups that traditionally favor Democratic candidates. The states that have clamped down — including five of the nation's 12 most contested battleground states — hold 171 of the 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency.

    Sources: Brennan CenterCommentary, National Law JournalNY TimesPoliticoRolling StoneWall St. JournalWash. Monthly

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    295 comments

    • Thomas  •  7 mths ago
      So, you need ID to buy smokes and booze but not to vote?
    • Charles  •  7 mths ago
      What do the new laws change?
      The most significant restriction requires Americans in several states to present state-issued photo IDs when they vote. The Brennan Center estimates that 3.3 million eligible voters in the affected states — Kansas, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin — don't have such IDs now. Other Americans would be affected by laws in Alabama, Texas, and Kansas requiring proof of citizenship when they register to vote, and by new restrictions on same-day voter registration in Florida, Texas, and Maine (which eliminated it entirely). Florida, Georgia, Ohio, Tennessee and West Virginia also cut back on early voting, and two states — Florida and Ohio — reversed earlier changes that had made it easier for convicted felons to recover their eligibility to vote.

      Why is this a problem? People have to have ID's to buy cigarettes, alcohol, car, get a loan, employment, cash a check, enroll in school, collect public aid.....even to get the lights turned on....
      • W.R. 7 mths ago
        I live in SC and have always had to produce ID (drivers licence) what is the big deal!
      • Bri 7 mths ago
        A voice of reason!
    • L  •  7 mths ago
      What the country needs is for potential voters to show proof that their IQ above 50.
      • Tony 7 mths ago
        Then this article would be about republicans being disenfranchised.
    • r.c.  •  7 mths ago
      I have had to show my ID every single time I had to vote along with my voter's registration card. I'm an american citizen, so I have both. No problem. Why should this be a problem for anyone who is legally here and not a criminal???
    • Jack  •  7 mths ago
      Stop illegal immigration, stop voter fraud. If you are an American there is plenty of time to get a photo id and get a voter registration. I lost my license last month, a passport, photo id, birth certificate, and social security card and two proofs of residence were required for a new license. It took about 15 minutes at the FL dmv. If your not hiding something or pure lazy, obtaining a registration card, and photo id shouldn't be a problem.
      • spinning_left 7 mths ago
        your missing the point ,voting is a fundamental right,it does not need Republican adjustment.
    • Michael  •  7 mths ago
      in order to get a job, write/cash a check or a variety of other instances (food stamps/ui) you must present a state issued id, proof of citenzenship or prove that you are legally entitled to work in mthis country. Why shouldn't youto peove who you are to vote?
      • Terry 7 mths ago
        You do when you register to vote. You don't have to show your social security card every time you go to work. What is proposed is a poll tax.
    • Kelly  •  7 mths ago
      I love the poster showing Moochele Oblama working at the soup kitchen serving free food to the homeless and she poses for a photo when one of the homeless homies pulls out his $500 Blackberry to take her photo. What is that $100 month plan?
    • St. Richard  •  7 mths ago
      It is simple; show your ID when appearing to vote. That is it ! What is there to oppose, we show ID for many other things, why not for voting. Hiding something or just a chronic whiner?
      • MatthewS 7 mths ago
        There are a lot of people who don't have a state-issued ID. They don't drive, they don't fly. They are generally poor people. But they are still people and still citizens and still have a right to vote.

        I know that this fact escapes many conservatives, but not all people are not, and need be, just like you.
      • St. Richard 7 mths ago
        Then how are they going to vote? If it meant getting a free handout, they would find a way I bet. There is no good reason for not showing ID's, but you all keep trying to invent them. What are you hiding?
    • Thomas M  •  7 mths ago
      This is yet another in a series of meaningless articles that rail against common sense and logic. No wonder the libs are opposed. SOMEONE PLEASE TELL ME HOW REQUIRING A VALID ID IS GOING TO BE PROBLEMATIC FOR ONLY DEMOCRATS!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    • Bri  •  7 mths ago
      How? By making people prove they can legaly vote for the leader of a country? Sure, you need a license to buy a can of beer, but vote for the leaders of the free world? Nah..don't worry about it.
      The author of this article is an idiot.
    • rustypipes1  •  7 mths ago
      I am poor and certainly old. But I have voted every year since I was old enough ! And will continue to do so. I have to show a pictured I. D. for a lot of things. So for something as inportant as voting do not mind showing proof of who I am.
    • JohnQ  •  7 mths ago
      What a crock. We need I.D. for so much in our lives now. Having it to vote is sensible..
    • Ilona  •  7 mths ago
      So why is it big deal, if you have to be a citizen to vote (and you do, always have) Why do some have a problem with showing Proper I.D.. I just don't see the other side of the argument. and why will this only suppress the dem. votes. I'm not being sarcastic here maybe someone can explain it better. Really, I want to know.
    • william h  •  7 mths ago
      How do these people fuction in todays' world without having an ID. IT takes very little to get one and I know the state of SC is bending over backwards to help anyone who needs one. If the NAACP is going to complain, why don't they do something like take these people to the places to get an ID issued. They are big on voter drives, so why not this. It would also appear that these nitwits believe that the only people without IDs would vote Democrat and that this would be an effective way to stop them. Any person who really wants to vote, will comply with the laws and do what it takes to make sure they can cast their vote.
    • Todd  •  7 mths ago
      I don't understand why it is such a problem to show a standard and valid form of identification in order to vote. If you cannot prove that you are who you say you are at the registration counter, then you do not get to vote. The consequence of not being able to vote, or what this article likes to call "thinly veiled disenfranchisement" is the responsibility of the person who cannot show proof of identification, and not the responsibility of those trying to facilitate integrity in our Democracy.
    • Thomas M  •  7 mths ago
      How's the voter fraud in states that already have the id system in place working out?
    • MiddlePolitix  •  7 mths ago
      To all you geniuses saying "ID is no big deal" you need to get a better understanding of the issue. Every state has some proof of voter eligibility. What's new in the laws is that it requires a single form of ID. Before someone could vote with a non-state issued ID and some proof of address. Additionally, it allows "officials" to reject an id more liberally than before -which opens up to opportuity for turning away minority & young voters that tend to lean democratic. it's far from simply requiring an ID to vote.
    • Thomas  •  7 mths ago
      Isn't getting a state issued ID and a social security number two of the first things you have to do in your life? Hell, our kids have to carry a ID from the time they start the first grade. I don't see the problem unless you are hiding something.
    • jay  •  7 mths ago
      You're telling me having to present a valid ID is some kind of draconian issue? The only people who don't have them are illegal and don't need to be voting anyway. If they are legal and don't have ID then it's easy to get one!
    • Mr. Chris  •  7 mths ago
      If you are too poor to afford an ID, how do you apply for welfare and foodstamps without one?