On Wednesday night’s “Special Report” during the weekly online segment, Fox News contributor and Daily Beast columnist Kirsten Powers said her party — the Democratic Party —is “trapped in the past” in their opposition to voter ID laws.
“This is one of those arguments that I feel Democrats are sort of trapped in the past … At one point, I think this was true in extremely rural places or, you know, with people who were, you know, couldn’t read or couldn’t write — you know, in a different time,” she said. “Or when African-Americans were very afraid of the government — things like that.”
Since many state governments have been taken over by the Republican Party after the 2010 elections, throughout the country there has been a push to enact voter identification law. The measures have been opposed by President Barack Obama’s Department of Justice for the most part and have been played up as a potential 2012 election campaign issue.
Powers suggested that the Democratic Party explore ways to make sure everyone had an ID so they could vote, instead of opposing voter ID laws outright.
“Now today I’m just not on board with this,” Powers said. “I think it is perfectly reasonable to expect somebody to get an ID. And if they don’t have the money or the means to do it, the Democrats can start an organization that does that — that helps them go and raises the money to pay for them to get the ID, which is not that much money, and gives them the forms and tells them how to do it.”
Read more:
http://dailycaller.com/2012/04/18/kirsten-powers-democrats-are-sort-of-trapped-in-the-past-on-voter-id-opposition-video/#ixzz1sSKrAEnf
Please highlight the comedy I'm missing
Makes sense. Conservatives have got that covered. Again I'm going to say that conservatives are actively engaged in suppressing the vote and everybody here knows it.
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/state/u-s-judge-hears-registration-groups-case-against-2210864.html
The law, passed by the GOP-controlled legislature and signed by Gov. Rick Scott, shrinks from 10 days to 48 hours the time that such organizations have to file completed voter registration applications with the state. It also establishes a schedule of fines for violations - as high as $1,000.
In addition, it requires that each organization sign an affidavit acknowledging the rules and penalties but also that each volunteer sign such an affidavit, acknowledging possible personal liability.
Republican legislators say the law will reduce voter fraud.
"This is frankly not a serious law," Lee Rowland, an attorney representing the organizations, told U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle.
Rowland called the law "a cumulative and unworkable mess" foisted upon the Florida Division of Elections.
Hinkle listened to the groups' presentation, inserting an occasional question. But the judge was more aggressive with lawyers for the state, making them address a list of hypothetical situations in which citizens volunteering for voter registration groups could end up violating the law, even though they have no criminal intent.
He also repeatedly pushed the lawyers to identify the state's interest in tightening the rules.
Representing the state, Blaine Winship of the Florida Attorney General's Office argued that the law ensures that groups entrusted with important documents take care of them.
"The purpose of this is to make sure that people actually get registered," Winship said.
"I really don't need the state to help me" with that, Hinkle responded.
Hinkle focused in part on a provision requiring any voter registration forms returned by mail to either arrive within the 48-hour window or be clearly postmarked within that time. Hinkle noted that the mail sometimes takes more than two days to arrive and that postmarks are often unclear.
"How would any prudent organization ever mail in a form that it collected at a voter registration drive under this statute?" he asked.
In their complaint, the organizations, which say they have never been charged with voter fraud, claim they have been forced to severely curtail - or, in the case of the League of Women Voters, stop - registration of voters in Florida. The time frames in the law may not always be met, the organizations contend, and they and their volunteers could not afford to pay the penalties.