The Obama/Holder DOJ's Identity Problem
Is there, or should there ever be, a point when a state is no longer penalized for its discriminatory past?
Not according to the Department of Justice, which last Friday rejected a South Carolina law that would have required voters show a valid photo ID before casting their ballots.
Justice says the law discriminates against minorities. The Obama administration said, "South Carolina's law didn't meet the burden under the 1965 Voting Rights Act, which outlawed discriminatory practices preventing blacks from voting." Why South Carolina? Because, the Justice Department contends, it's tasked with approving voting changes in states that have failed in the past to protect the rights of blacks.
Are they serious?
There are two African Americans representing South Carolina in the U.S. House of Representatives, One is Tim Scott, a freshman Republican. The other is 10-term Rep. James Clyburn, the current assistant Democratic leader. There are numerous minority members of the S.C. state legislature and Governor Nikki Haley who is Indian-American.
This is not your grandfather's South Carolina. This is not the South Carolina of the then-segregationist and Dixiecrat presidential candidate Strom Thurmond. Yesterday's South Carolina had segregated schools, lunch counters, restrooms and buses and a dominant Democratic Party. Today's South Carolina is a modern, integrated, forward-looking, dual-party state.
If Justice thinks proving who one is by showing valid photo ID discriminates against minorities, how does it explain the election of so many minority legislators? Are only whites voting for them?
Democrats, especially, should be sensitive to states and people who have demonstrated that they have changed. It was the Democratic Party of the late 19th century that resisted integration throughout the South, passing Jim Crow laws that frustrated blacks who wanted to vote. Those were Southern Democrats who stood in schoolhouse doors, barring blacks from entering. Today, many members of that same party refuse to allow poor minority students to leave failing government schools as part of the school voucher system because they, apparently, value political contributions from teachers unions more than they value educational achievement.
The South Carolina law that offends the Justice Department anticipated objections that some poor minorities might not have driver's licenses (and certainly not a passport) because they might not own cars. So the state will provide free voter ID cards with a picture of the voter on it. All someone has to do is prove who they claim to be. A birth certificate will do nicely. A utility bill can be used to prove residency.
Not requiring a voter to prove his or her citizenship and residence is a recipe for voter fraud. Democrats like to accuse Republicans of trying to keep minorities from voting because they know most will vote for Democrats. Even if that were true (and it's debatable) the reverse is probably truer. Some Democrats have allegedly encouraged people to vote who were not eligible, some more than once. Without a valid ID, how can we stop this?
The Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law has compiled a list of new voter identification laws passed this year. In addition to the one in South Carolina, all require some form of photo identification. Will Justice go after all of them, as well?
According to the Brennan Center, a new law in Kansas, effective Jan. 1, 2012, requires a photo ID, with certain exceptions such as a physical disability that makes it impossible for the person to travel to a government office to acquire one, though they must have "qualified for permanent advance voting status..."
A new Texas law, which took effect on September 1, requires a photo ID in order to vote, or another form of personal ID card issued by the Department of Public Safety.
Even historically liberal Wisconsin passed a new law this year requiring voters to prove who they are, in most cases with a photo ID.
Governor Haley and South Carolina Rep. Joe Wilson vow to fight the Justice Department ruling. They should. Photo IDs are required when flying on commercial aircraft or cashing a check. That discriminates against no one. Neither does requiring people to prove who they are before voting, unless, of course, there's another agenda, like "stuffing" the ballot box.
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Comments
AG Holder has the identity problem; voter ID laws, are populist.
Submitted by Gary Hall on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 7:45pm.
The R's need to listen up here - they own the popular view.
Allow me to reference an analysis by John Fund, a few years back, regarding the recommendations of the Carter-Baker Election Reform Commission, "WSJ - Jimmy Carter is Right" (my bold):
The Carter-Baker commission issued 87 recommendations to improve the functioning of election systems.[..]
[One] was that 18 of 21 commissioners backed a requirement that voters show some form of photo identification. They argued that with Congress passing the Real ID Act to standardize security protections for drivers' licenses in all 50 states, the time had come to standardize voter ID requirements.
Yes - even former President Jimmy Carter supported it.
Are they going to call him a racist? Is Eric Holder going to go after former President Jimmy Carter?
Note: National polling has long illustrated that such has super majority support amongst voters. Let's call it a popular, or better yet, a populist view.
Yet, how'd the left react to this super majority view (18 of 21 commissioners on a bipartisan panel)?
Former Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle joined two other commissioners in complaining that the ID requirements would be akin to a Jim Crow-era "poll tax" and would restrict voting among the poor or elderly who might lack such an ID.
Mr. Daschle's racially charged analogy is preposterous. Almost everyone needs photo ID in today's modern world. Andrew Young, the former Atlanta mayor and U.N. ambassador, believes that in an era when people have to show ID to rent a video or cash a check, "requiring ID can help poor people" who otherwise might be even more marginalized by not having one.
Don't expect to see anyone in the national MSM bring in a Jimmy Carter, or Andrew Young, and allow them to present their views.
They're still using this lame shrill and dishonest method of pushing their liberal - minority - view.
Are we going to let the radical left win this again, by allowing them to paint the super majority of Americans as an intolerant and/or racist small bunch of outcasts, or, are we going to stand up and till the loud, but small bunch of leftists that they are wildly outnumbered and to shut-up?
Photo ID laws are both populist and supported by powerful voices on the left - and the right. We should be able to form the major bi-partisan consensus required to shut the small radical minority of out-of-touch partisan loud mouth kooks that AG Eric Holder and this White House are associated with.
(;~/ Gary
Canada
Submitted by vividsign on Wed, 12/28/2011 - 8:30pm.
I live in Canada... we have 3 options when voting Provincially or Federally... 1 piece of authorized photo ID... or 2 pieces of authorized ID... or 1 person that has authorized ID that can vouch for you... and yes... you must be a Canadian citizen 18 years of age or older... it's "F" ing crazy here...
@Gary... good work...
I could agree with Oblamer & Co. if only non-Caucasians were required to present photo ID... but that's one of their political strategies... racism. "Blame everyone else" is another political strategy... am I missing any other strategies? Oh silly me... I forgot... lie, lie, lie, lie and lie some more...
Keeping them down on the plantation
Submitted by DontFeedTheTrolls on Thu, 12/29/2011 - 6:30am.
Once again, the left is telling us that American blacks are too stupid to be able to figure out how to get a photo ID, and the American blacks (including Obama and Holder) are buying it. I suppose American blacks will never be able to:
Serious
Submitted by m1xram on Thu, 12/29/2011 - 7:36am.
Of course they are serious. How are you ever going to find those 200 plus votes in your trunk (all for Al Frankin) if you require IDs?
The opposite of Left is Freedom.