So getting voter ID is going to completely eliminate voter fraud?
I really doubt voter fraud has changed the outcome of all that many elections.
Cyrone said:So getting voter ID is going to completely eliminate voter fraud?
I'm completely in agreement.
I don't think it's that easy. You would have to pick the correct polling location where the person is registered, and then maybe even show the voter registration card, depending on the state.Doesn't it bug you that even if it doesn't change the race that someone can walk into a voting station, say they are you, take your vote and use it in a way that you disagree with?
I don't think it's that easy. You would have to pick the correct polling location where the person is registered, and then maybe even show the voter registration card, depending on the state.
I honestly can't remember what I had to do to register to vote, it's been so long. But I know it would have been fairly easy for them to verify I'm actually alive, and living at the address I claim to live at.
Doing that would stop a lot more fraud than simply requiring an ID. Fake IDs are not all that hard to get for a determined individual. And if they verify the ID, they could even easier verify the person.
It's simple, when someone registers to vote you check the database and see if they are really a dead person. You also check the records and see if there is evidence they live at the address they claim to live at. If there is any doubt, you follow up with them and tell them to either verify some information that is on file (previous addresses, employment history, something from the credit file, when and where they last voted, income tax history, whatever), or let them bring an ID either to the polling location (which would only need to be done that one time and then they would be verified) or to the county clerk or whoever registers voters.
It would also need an immediate turnaround. If banks can decide whether to give you a $250,000.00 30 year loan in 5 minutes with an online application, the county should be able to verify if you're actually alive and living at the address you claim to live at in the same 5 minutes with an even simpler application and records check.
If you make that a requirement for voting, aren't you then setting a financial condition for voting?
What do I care? If someone can't afford an $18 card then they probably shouldn't be voting anyway.
How significant of a problem is this?
The report says nearly 900 deceased people have been voting, which caught the attention of South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson.