Rejecting Voter ID Aids Those Who Want Election Fraud to Continue

P21SeanTurner

Sean Turner

By Sean Turner

I travel by plane on a weekly basis.  While it is not the most pleasant experience these days, I’ve learned to deal with the scrutiny that is imposed on travelers in a post-9/11 America.

In reality, I don’t have much choice since flying is still the most convenient way to travel long distances.

Like every other mildly irritated — or extremely frustrated — traveler, I’m required to provide a valid photo ID before I am allowed to fly.

Of all the security measures that are imposed on us, including random pat-downs and full-body scans, the requirement that we present identification seems the easiest to endure.  After all, it sounds logical to ask me to verify who I say I am — not only to help prevent more terrorists from boarding planes but also to prevent or deter fraud and other crimes.

When it comes to the electoral process, however, the logic of identity verification somehow gets lost.

Texas, where I live right now, is among 34 states that introduced or enacted new photo ID requirements for voting.  This is drawing objections from both liberal political activists and the Obama Justice Department.  The Justice Department has put enforcement on hold under its “preclearance” power under the Voting Rights Act, claiming that Texas’ Voter ID requirement would disfranchise hundreds of thousands of registered Hispanics.

Regardless of race, color or ethnicity, every American citizen over the age of 18 has the right to register to vote (with some exceptions for convicted criminals or persons deemed mentally incapacitated).  This right is guaranteed by the 15th and 26th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.

In a perfect world, one could simply show up at their nearest polling location, or go online to cast a ballot, without fraud concerns.  But no such utopia exists.  There will always be those who seek to delegitimize an election.

Corruption, by the way, has no single political affiliation.

Voter ID requirements can help safeguard the electoral process and protect our votes from being stolen.

Opponents of voter ID laws often point to the lack of identification among certain minority groups and the elderly as a reason to reject these laws.  This can be addressed through voluntary ID card programs that local police departments provide, such as the one in Palm Beach, Florida.

Given the availability of state-issued driver’s licenses, passports, military and student ID cards and police-issued voluntary ID cards, it’s difficult for me to believe that any citizen, regardless of their race or age, who values voting as a fundamental constitutional right cannot obtain valid identification to exercise that right.

Granted, no system of voter verification is perfect.  There will always be someone who is determined to defraud the public by corrupting the process.  This being said, rejecting a system that reduces the number of ineligible, imaginary or dead people who “cast ballots” aids those who want voter fraud to continue.

If merchants, banks, purveyors of alcoholic beverages, airlines, the Transportation Security Administration and others can require valid identification, then it’s surely not unreasonable to expect the same level of verification for the election of individuals who determine the fate of our cities, states and nation.

Sean Turner is a member of the national advisory council of the Project 21 black leadership network and a freelance writer whose commentaries have appeared in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Washington Times and other newspapers.  Comments may be sent to seancommentary@gmail.com.

This is a New Visions Commentary paper published March 2012 by The National Center for Public Policy Research. New Visions Commentaries reflect the views of their author, and not necessarily those of Project 21.

AFS/GMS via National Center for Public Policy Research

12 thoughts on “Rejecting Voter ID Aids Those Who Want Election Fraud to Continue

  1. I was making a $7.00 purchase with my debit card at the Hallmark store a couple of weeks ago, and they asked for I.D. I got fed up and paid cash. I guess now, I’m a terrorist suspect. Our Government is blatantly, and obviously, making laws to stay in power and they’ve made the American citizen the ‘enemy’ in the process, from what I am seeing these days.

    • say whuuuuuut? how is that “the Government” making you an enemy?
      stores set their own policies. since when is “Hallmark” the Federal Govt?

      • My point was, if you get ID’d for something as trivial as a $7.00 purchase as routine procedure at a Hallmark store, you would think voter ID would be mandatory. The fact that we are talking about the Federal Government and the fate our Nation, further reinforces the necessity for pictorial identification when casting a vote. Sorry that you misunderstood, or perhaps, it was I that didn’t not present my self clearly. In which case, I apologize. Either way, pictorial ID would probably cut down on some of the corruption in our Nations’ polling stations. And word has it, that the
        Government is now considering those that pay with cash as ‘suspect’. Check out the NDAA bill that Obama recently signed into law, then perhaps
        you’ll better understand my sarcasm.

  2. Excellent article. Having spent most of my adult life in Chicago I have seen voter fraud in action – and elevated to an art form. Here in Las Vegas a person cannot participate in a casino’s “rewards program” without providing a valid ID. I was shocked that no such requirement was imposed when I cast my first vote as a new Nevada resident.

  3. Virginia has a motor voter law – you automatically register to vote when you apply for a driver’s license. How does that stop felons and illegals from voting? We need voter ID’s and stricter voter laws!

  4. right on Sean.
    and also…. libs are crying boo hooo requiring an ID is essentially putting a “road block” to a Constitutional Right <—– that is another bs argument i've heard various ID opponents use. well, okay then, by that same logic: shouldn't we all be allowed to purchase a firearm without the BURDEN of producing an ID? Last time i checked, the right to Own and Bear Arms is also a CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT.

  5. Pingback: Counterfeit Voting – Voter Identification Laws Protect Your Civil Liberty | Letting Freedom Ring

  6. A protest movement for the rest of us: No cost, no signs, no yelling, no tear gas
    Finally, a protest movement custom made for all us conservatives and moderates who are too hard-working, law-abiding, responsible and camera-shy to do anything but complain to each other online, and maybe vote.
    Voting, as it happens, is what this call to protest is all about. Free and fair elections are the very bedrock of our Republic. Yet we watch in disgust as voting fraud sweeps across our country, while elected officials turn a blind eye and ignore the very reasonable public demand for showing identification at polling stations.
    We’re told that elections officials are not allowed by law to even ask to see a voter’s I.D. because somebody might be offended. Voting fraud is a crime, but if the law isn’t enforced, what’s the point?
    Even if there is a law saying poll workers can’t ask for I.D., there is no law saying legal voters can’t show their qualifications to receive a ballot. Should that be: Don’t Ask, Do Tell?
    Come this Primary Election Day in June, I will show up at my polling place with my driving license in a clear plastic case suspended on a lanyard hung around my collar. I won’t have to say a word to get the point across: I’m proud to be a legal American voter, lawfully exercising my constitutional rights in a peaceful and non-partisan way.
    I’m rather hoping that more than a few other Americans join this silent but highly visible effort to once again demonstrate that actions speak louder than words, and also get far greater attention from media and politicians.
    So if you’re already voting at the polls on election day, please just display your I.D. You will feel good for having done something to show your support for voting integrity. You will have spent nothing and joined nothing. No telemarketers will call, and there won’t be any boring meetings to miss.
    If you support this plan, please pass it along. I welcome feedback.

    Larry Grooms
    Lancaster, CA

  7. Pingback: Anita Moncrief Takes on Eric Holder on Race, ACORN and Voter Fraud | Letting Freedom Ring

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