If you want to change this country this has to STOP!

http://www.brennancenter.org/legal-work/arizona-v-inter-tribal-council-arizona-inc-amicus-brief





Arizona v. Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, Inc. (Amicus Brief)



June 17, 2013|



Voting Rights & Elections,

Restricting the Vote




On June 17, 2013, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Arizona v. The Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, Inc. that Proposition 200, an Arizona law requiring applicants to present documentary proof of citizenship as a condition for voter registration, is preempted by Congress's power to regulate federal elections.

In October 2010, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that Arizona’s documentary proof of citizenship requirement for voter registration violates the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA). In April 2012, the en banc Court agreed with the earlier panel decision that the Arizona proof of citizenship requirement was preempted by the NVRA. Arizona requested that the Supreme Court review the Ninth Circuit’s decision, and in October 2012, the Supreme Court granted certiorari.

The Brennan Center, along with the Constitutional Accountability Center, filed an amicus brief on behalf of constitutional law professors explaining that in enacting the NVRA, Congress acted for the very reasons at the core of the text and history of the Elections Clause, using its express power to protect the right to vote and ensure a uniform method of voter registration across all fifty states. The amicus brief argues that Congress chose to “alter” state-law requirements such as Arizona’s and urges the Supreme Court to invalidate Proposition 200.

The Supreme Court decision upholds the Ninth Circuit ruling, rejecting Arizona's effort to impose additional registration requirements that conflict with the NVRA's requirement that states "accept and use" the standard federal voter registration form.

Supreme Court Filings
•Supreme Court Decision
•Brief of Petitioner Arizona
•Brief of Petitioners 26 County Recorders and County Election Directors
•Brief for Gonzalez Respondents
•Brief for Respondents Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, Inc.

Amicus Briefs Filed in the Supreme Court on Behalf of Respondents
•Brief of Constitutional Law Professors: This brief demonstrates that the text and history of the Elections Clause give Congress the express power to “make or alter” state law in order to protect the right to vote in federal elections and ensure uniform rules for the time, place, and manner of federal elections.
•Brief of Community Voter Registration Organizations: This brief argues that community-based voter registration efforts are made more difficult, less effective, and more expensive as a result of Proposition 200’s proof of citizenship requirements.
•Brief of League of Women Voters: This brief explains that Congress intended for the NVRA to preempt state law and rejected the inclusion of a requirement for documentary proof of citizenship on the federal form.
•Brief of Election Administrators: This demonstrates that non-citizen voting is extremely uncommon. Additional proof of citizenship requirements impose substantial burdens on voters that already have and would continue to prevent thousands of eligible citizens. from registering to vote, and also increase the likelihood of errors and delays.
•Brief of Members of Congress: This brief discusses the legislative history of the NVRA and argues that Proposition 200 is inconsistent with the NVRA’s “accept and use” requirement.
•Brief of Overseas Vote Foundation, Federation of American Women’s Club Overseas, American Citizens Abroad, Military Spouses of Michigan, and Arizona Students’ Association: This brief argues that Proposition 200’s citizenship documentation requirement is especially burdensome for overseas servicemembers and civilians, college students, and residents of long-term care facilities, groups that have received special congressional protection when it comes to the right to vote.
•Brief of NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc., the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, and the Anti-Defamation League: This brief demonstrates that Congress enacted the NVRA in response to persisting discriminatory voting laws and to equalize access to voter registration, and asserts that Proposition 200 is inconsistent and preempted by the NVRA.

Appellate Court Filings
•Ninth Circuit Panel Decision
•Ninth Circuit En Banc Opinion
•Brennan Center’s Amicus Brief before the Ninth Circuit
 
http://www.brennancenter.org/legal-work/south-carolina-v-holder




South Carolina v. Holder



October 15, 2012|



Voting Rights & Elections,

Restricting the Vote




The League of Women Voters of South Carolina and Craig Debose, a South Carolina resident who lacks photo identification, intervened in South Carolina v. Holder to block South Carolina’s new, restrictive law requiring photo ID to vote. The Brennan Center for Justice and Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law represented the League and Mr. Debose with pro bono counsel at the law firms of Sullivan & Cromwell and Derfner Altman & Wilborn. Additional intervenor defendants included the South Carolina State Conference of the NAACP, the Family Unit Inc. – a South Carolina based non-profit that helps South Carolina citizens register to vote – and various South Carolina residents who would be affected if the new law were to go into effect.

The League argued that the law would erect unnecessary barriers to voting and could disenfranchise thousands of minority voters. Thus, the new identification requirement would interfere with its mission to encourage civic participation through voting. Mr. Debose had made previous attempts over the span of several years to obtain a South Carolina photo ID, but was unable to do so. Mr. Debose argued that if the new law were to go into effect, he would not be able to vote.

Under the federal Voting Rights Act, changes to South Carolina’s election laws must be “pre-cleared” by the Department of Justice or a D.C federal court. South Carolina originally sought preclearance from the Department of Justice (DOJ) on June 28, 2011. On December 23, 2011, DOJ announced that it would not preclear the law. On February 8, 2012 South Carolina challenged the DOJ’s ruling in federal district court. A complete list of the letters from South Carolina to the DOJ, from DOJ to South Carolina, and from the Brennan Center to the DOJ is available here.

On October 10, 2012, a three judge panel ruled there was not enough time left to implement the law for the 2012 general election. The law will be in effect for future elections, but the court clarified aspects of the law so that it “does not require a photo ID to vote.” Instead, South Carolinians can continue to use their non-photo voter registration card after 2012, so long as the voter states the reason for not having obtained a photo ID.

South Carolina’s photo ID law is just one of many restrictive laws passed in the states since the beginning of the 2011 legislative session. For more information on these laws, see the Brennan Center report Voting Law Changes in 2012.

Press Release for South Carolina v. Holder decision available here.

Key Documents
•Memorandum Opinion as to Preclearance
 
http://www.brennancenter.org/analys...plauds-kansas-governor-sebeliuss-veto-hb-2019





National Network for Election Reform Applauds Kansas Governor Sebelius's Veto of H.B. 2019



May 19, 2008|



Restricting the Vote,

Voting Rights & Elections









Download Statement

For Immediate Release: May 19, 2008

Contact:
Caroline Stuart, PFAW, 202-467-4999

The National Network on Election Reform, which represents
organizations that advocate for civil rights, voting rights, the disability
community, students, elderly citizens, workers, non-profits and others,
applauds Governor Sebelius for vetoing House Bill 2019 (H.B. 2019) today. The organizations released the following
joint statement:

"We commend Governor Sebelius for standing
up to protect Kansans' right to vote. H.B.
2019 would have disenfranchised thousands of eligible Kansas voters by requiring them to show a
government photo ID in order to vote and present a birth certificate, passport
or naturalization papers in order to vote.
It is estimated that approximately 107,000 Kansans lack a birth
certificate or passport. In a time when
our country is experiencing an overwhelming voter turnout, we should be
discussing ways to ensure access to the ballot, not limit it."

The National Network on Election Reform is comprised of:
• American Civil Liberties Union
• AARP
• Common Cause
• Demos: A Network for Ideas
& Action
• FairVote
• People For the American Way
• Rock The Vote
• Service Employees International Union
• The Lawyers' Committee for Civil
Rights Under Law
• The Brennan Center
For Justice
 
Desh, can you prove that someone's legal right to vote was denied because they had no ID?

Or are you going to continue spamming the board with opinion pieces and court filings which don't show that has ever happened?

BTW, where's the link to the study you said proved that Republicans are way more racist than Black people?
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voter_ID_Laws_in_the_United_States#Studies


Studies[edit]

A study by New York University's Brennan Center claimed that of the US population that is of voting age, 11% lack government-issued photo IDs.[30] A paper in the Harvard Law and Policy Review, “ID at the Polls: Assessing the Impact of Recent State Voter ID Laws on Voter Turnout”(PDF), compares changes in voter turnout between 2002 and 2006 as related to three voting requirement categories – photo ID needed, non-photo ID needed and no identification needed. Key study findings include: 1). “Non-photo ID laws [are] associated with a 2.2% point decline in turnout, and photo ID laws are correlated with a 1.6% point decline.” In a related analysis, the author found a 1.1% decline in turnout in states with strengthened photo ID laws between 2002 and 2006. 2). In 2002, prior to the widespread adoption of photo ID poll requirements, more than 40% of eligible voters in states with no voting ID requirements and more than 35% of voters in states with minimal ID requirements turned out at the polls. By 2006, the percentage of voting-age citizens who turned out in states with no ID requirement or a non-photo ID requirement increased to 42% and 38%, respectively. States requiring a photo voter ID saw the lowest percentage of voter turnout, approximately 37%. 3). Counties with older populations saw an increase in turnout of 1.5%. However, counties with higher Hispanic and Asian-American populations saw a small negative effect on voter turnout as ID laws were tightened. Greater household income positively correlated with voter turnout. 4). Possible variables impacting overall voter turnout include Election Day registration (associated with increases), the presence of an incumbent (a small increase) or a controversial ballot initiative (a 4.6% point increase in voter turnout). Much of the increase in voter turnout can be attributed to news coverage and state-sponsored public outreach.[31]

The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, disputed the methodology of the study of 900 people. The credibility of the survey was contested by another question, where 14% of respondents said they had both a U.S. birth certificate and naturalization papers.[32] In 2010, the voting age population was an estimated 237.3 million, and the citizen voting age population was 217.5 million. Of those, 186.9 million were registered voters.[33] The Heritage Foundation has pointed to U.S. Department of Transportation records showing that there were 205.8 million valid drivers licenses in 2009, meaning there are 19 million more individuals with photo ID than there are registered voters, as evidence that photo ID is not hard to obtain.[34] Similarly, Kris Kobach, a Republican supporter of Voter ID laws, points to evidence in Kansas that more than 30,000 registered drivers in Kansas are not registered to vote.[35]

Public opinion polls have shown strong support for voter ID laws amongst voters in the United States. A 2011 Rasmussen poll found that 75% of likely voters “believe voters should be required to show photo identification, such as a driver’s license, before being allowed to vote.”[36] A 2012 Fox News poll showed 70% of voters supported requiring an ID to vote, and 26% were opposed. Voter ID laws were supported by 52% of Democrats, 72% of independents and 87% of Republicans.[37]
 
I already have.

why do you continue to lie about it?

Desh, none of the cases you cited involved laws which in fact prevented anyone from doing anything......they were all cases where laws were challenged BEFORE they went into effect......do you have anything about a law which really prevented anyone from voting?.....
 
http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/voter_fraud_virtually_non-existent_study_finds/



Voter Fraud Virtually Non-Existent, Study Finds




James Joyner · Thursday, April 12, 2007 · 9 Comments

Despite a five-year crackdown on voter fraud, there is little evidence that it is a real problem, the NYT reports in a front-page story by Eric Lipton and Ian Urbina.


Although Republican activists have repeatedly said fraud is so widespread that it has corrupted the political process and, possibly, cost the party election victories, about 120 people have been charged and 86 convicted as of last year. Most of those charged have been Democrats, voting records show. Many of those charged by the Justice Department appear to have mistakenly filled out registration forms or misunderstood eligibility rules, a review of court records and interviews with prosecutors and defense lawyers show.

In Miami, an assistant United States attorney said many cases there involved what were apparently mistakes by immigrants, not fraud.

In Wisconsin, where prosecutors have lost almost twice as many cases as they won, charges were brought against voters who filled out more than one registration form and felons seemingly unaware that they were barred from voting. One ex-convict was so unfamiliar with the rules that he provided his prison-issued identification card, stamped “Offender,” when he registered just before voting.

A handful of convictions involved people who voted twice. More than 30 were linked to small vote-buying schemes in which candidates generally in sheriff’s or judge’s races paid voters for their support.

[...]

Mistakes and lapses in enforcing voting and registration rules routinely occur in elections, allowing thousands of ineligible voters to go to the polls. But the federal cases provide little evidence of widespread, organized fraud, prosecutors and election law experts said
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voter_ID_Laws_in_the_United_States#Studies


Studies[edit]

A study by New York University's Brennan Center claimed that of the US population that is of voting age, 11% lack government-issued photo IDs.[30] A paper in the Harvard Law and Policy Review, “ID at the Polls: Assessing the Impact of Recent State Voter ID Laws on Voter Turnout”(PDF), compares changes in voter turnout between 2002 and 2006 as related to three voting requirement categories – photo ID needed, non-photo ID needed and no identification needed. Key study findings include: 1). “Non-photo ID laws [are] associated with a 2.2% point decline in turnout, and photo ID laws are correlated with a 1.6% point decline.” In a related analysis, the author found a 1.1% decline in turnout in states with strengthened photo ID laws between 2002 and 2006. 2). In 2002, prior to the widespread adoption of photo ID poll requirements, more than 40% of eligible voters in states with no voting ID requirements and more than 35% of voters in states with minimal ID requirements turned out at the polls. By 2006, the percentage of voting-age citizens who turned out in states with no ID requirement or a non-photo ID requirement increased to 42% and 38%, respectively. States requiring a photo voter ID saw the lowest percentage of voter turnout, approximately 37%. 3). Counties with older populations saw an increase in turnout of 1.5%. However, counties with higher Hispanic and Asian-American populations saw a small negative effect on voter turnout as ID laws were tightened. Greater household income positively correlated with voter turnout. 4). Possible variables impacting overall voter turnout include Election Day registration (associated with increases), the presence of an incumbent (a small increase) or a controversial ballot initiative (a 4.6% point increase in voter turnout). Much of the increase in voter turnout can be attributed to news coverage and state-sponsored public outreach.[31]

The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, disputed the methodology of the study of 900 people. The credibility of the survey was contested by another question, where 14% of respondents said they had both a U.S. birth certificate and naturalization papers.[32] In 2010, the voting age population was an estimated 237.3 million, and the citizen voting age population was 217.5 million. Of those, 186.9 million were registered voters.[33] The Heritage Foundation has pointed to U.S. Department of Transportation records showing that there were 205.8 million valid drivers licenses in 2009, meaning there are 19 million more individuals with photo ID than there are registered voters, as evidence that photo ID is not hard to obtain.[34] Similarly, Kris Kobach, a Republican supporter of Voter ID laws, points to evidence in Kansas that more than 30,000 registered drivers in Kansas are not registered to vote.[35]

Public opinion polls have shown strong support for voter ID laws amongst voters in the United States. A 2011 Rasmussen poll found that 75% of likely voters “believe voters should be required to show photo identification, such as a driver’s license, before being allowed to vote.”[36] A 2012 Fox News poll showed 70% of voters supported requiring an ID to vote, and 26% were opposed. Voter ID laws were supported by 52% of Democrats, 72% of independents and 87% of Republicans.[37]

Leave it to Deshy to post discredited studies from Wiki.

:rofl2:

If you want to make it a fair comparison. You need to compare similar voting type years and adjust for population decline/increase etc.
 
http://truth-out.org/news/item/1933...keep-more-than-17500-legal-voters-from-voting


Voters who had registered to vote using the federal registration form --- as mandated by the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA or "Motor Voter Act", since it requires local government facilities, such as DMVs, to provide a nationally standardized voter registration form) --- are now being blocked by Kobach from voting in KS, unless they have been able to prove their citizenship to the satisfaction of a new state law written by Kobach and passed by state Republicans last year.




Kansas Secretary of State Has Plan to Keep More Than 17,500 Legal Voters From Voting
 
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