The elections are only a few months behind us, but Democrats are already busy working to ensure citizens and non-citizens, the dead, felons, and those registered in two or more states can cast a ballot in the next political contests.
These "new Americans" - the term used by Democratic rising star and Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley for illegal immigrants, used-to-be Americans, those who gave up their voting rights after committing a crime and extra-engaged citizens - have one thing in common: They like Democrats.
That's why the left is busy pushing voter "access" from the top down.
President Barack Obama said in his inauguration speech that, "Our journey is not complete until no citizen is forced to wait for hours to exercise the right to vote." And in his State of the Union speech, Obama proposed a commission to study electoral reform to make voting faster and easier.
But that is really not the mission. The average wait time around the country is 14 minutes, hardly an overwhelming burden.
The real issue is finding ways to ensure Democratic hegemony for decades to come. That's why the party and liberal activists want federal and state reforms allowing same-day registration and voting, and expanded early voting. It's also why they go postal over laws requiring voter identification and refuse to acknowledge fraud and election security issues.
Instead, they say the real problem is a vast conservative conspiracy to prevent minorities and the poor from voting.
As Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, said on the floor of the House, "State legislatures are attempting to impose voting restrictions that are the modern day equivalent of poll taxes and literacy tests. We cannot allow state legislatures to drag our nation backward in what is nothing more than a political quest to protect their governing majority's interests."
First, virtually everyone has a photo ID these days because they are a requirement of the activities of modern life, from boarding a plane to cashing a check.
But many of the state laws referenced by Wasserman Schultz don't require a photo ID. They ask for things such as a utility bill, bank statement, or Social Security card.
Second, even those who believe that line of reasoning admit that the number of people impacted by ID laws will be small. As Harvard history professor Alexander Keyssar wrote prior to the November election, "The number is unlikely to be huge, particularly since various pro-voting-rights groups (as well as the Democratic party) will work hard to help people get their ID documents."
Keyssar thinks the number could be "large enough to affect the outcome of close races for Congress and even for the presidency," but does not offer evidence to back his claim.
There is plenty of evidence of fraud, however.
Wendy Rosen, a Democrat who ran for Congress in Maryland last year, withdrew from her race after news broke that she voted in both Florida and Maryland.
The New York Daily News found that 46,000 snowbirds, mostly Democrats, were registered in both New York City and Florida. Its analysis exposed that up to 1,000 of them voted in both states in multiple elections. The paper wrote, "The finding is even more stunning given the pivotal role Florida played in the 2000 presidential election, when a margin there of 537 votes tipped a victory to George W. Bush."
And a group in Minnesota found by comparing criminal records with voting rolls that more than 1,000 ineligible felons voted in the state's 2008 election that decided a U.S. Senate seat, won by Democrat Al Franken, by 312 votes.
Waiting in line to vote is an inconvenience, but reducing the wait time to zero is not worth it if it jeopardizes the integrity of elections across the United States. If those on the left truly cared about free and fair elections, they would focus on ensuring those allowed to vote have appropriate identification and that voter rolls do not allow people to vote in multiple states.
Couching the lie of "voter suppression" in the guise of "voter access" makes it no less dangerous.
- Marta H. Mossburg is an independent columnist. Contact her at marta@martamossburg.com.
I hate dog movies. In dog movies, the good, loyal, lovable dog always dies at the end and I end up sitting there in the dark with big tears streaming down my cheeks.
I’ve not kept it a secret that I find people who dress their dogs in clothes to be, to put it nicely, somewhat more than just eccentric. And many friendly, helpful readers out there have not kept it a secret that they really wish I would not express my views about dogs dressed as humans.
Distrust of government secrecy has been elevated to an exceptional level with the disclosure the Justice Department covertly examined two months of Associated Press phone records to determine who leaked details to the AP about a foiled terrorist plot.
It sounds like the plot from a dystopian libertarian novel. The word “patriot” and the phrase “educating on the Constitution and Bill of Rights” triggered heightened scrutiny from the most intrusive agency in the federal government.
The action at the bird feeder has been spectacular lately: Cardinals, finches, songbirds in impressive variety crowding around all day long in search of sustenance. It is truly gratifying …
Everyone presumes that Sen. Chuck Schumer, the media-hungry Democrat from New York, wants to be the next Senate majority leader. His performance in the negotiations over the Gang of Eight immigration plan should bolster his case for an eventual promotion.
An NPR broadcast examines the question of how communities can better prepare for tornadoes like the one that struck Moore, Okla. on Monday. The broadcast features commentary from Michael Fitzgerald, who reported a five-part disaster series for the CNHI News Service.
Shayla Taylor was so far along in labor that her nurses at Moore Medical Center decided not to move her when Monday's tornado hit. They waited out the storm in an operating room, where the wall disappeared as the tornado hit the building.
An NPR broadcast examines the question of how communities can better prepare for tornadoes like the one that struck Moore, Okla. on Monday. The broadcast features commentary from Michael Fitzgerald, who reported a five-part disaster series for the CNHI News Service.
Commentary
Discussion
Campaign for 'voter access' a bid to derail free elections
By Marta Mossburg CNHI
The elections are only a few months behind us, but Democrats are already busy working to ensure citizens and non-citizens, the dead, felons, and those registered in two or more states can cast a ballot in the next political contests.
These "new Americans" - the term used by Democratic rising star and Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley for illegal immigrants, used-to-be Americans, those who gave up their voting rights after committing a crime and extra-engaged citizens - have one thing in common: They like Democrats.
That's why the left is busy pushing voter "access" from the top down.
President Barack Obama said in his inauguration speech that, "Our journey is not complete until no citizen is forced to wait for hours to exercise the right to vote." And in his State of the Union speech, Obama proposed a commission to study electoral reform to make voting faster and easier.
But that is really not the mission. The average wait time around the country is 14 minutes, hardly an overwhelming burden.
The real issue is finding ways to ensure Democratic hegemony for decades to come. That's why the party and liberal activists want federal and state reforms allowing same-day registration and voting, and expanded early voting. It's also why they go postal over laws requiring voter identification and refuse to acknowledge fraud and election security issues.
Instead, they say the real problem is a vast conservative conspiracy to prevent minorities and the poor from voting.
As Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, said on the floor of the House, "State legislatures are attempting to impose voting restrictions that are the modern day equivalent of poll taxes and literacy tests. We cannot allow state legislatures to drag our nation backward in what is nothing more than a political quest to protect their governing majority's interests."
First, virtually everyone has a photo ID these days because they are a requirement of the activities of modern life, from boarding a plane to cashing a check.
But many of the state laws referenced by Wasserman Schultz don't require a photo ID. They ask for things such as a utility bill, bank statement, or Social Security card.
Second, even those who believe that line of reasoning admit that the number of people impacted by ID laws will be small. As Harvard history professor Alexander Keyssar wrote prior to the November election, "The number is unlikely to be huge, particularly since various pro-voting-rights groups (as well as the Democratic party) will work hard to help people get their ID documents."
Keyssar thinks the number could be "large enough to affect the outcome of close races for Congress and even for the presidency," but does not offer evidence to back his claim.
There is plenty of evidence of fraud, however.
Wendy Rosen, a Democrat who ran for Congress in Maryland last year, withdrew from her race after news broke that she voted in both Florida and Maryland.
The New York Daily News found that 46,000 snowbirds, mostly Democrats, were registered in both New York City and Florida. Its analysis exposed that up to 1,000 of them voted in both states in multiple elections. The paper wrote, "The finding is even more stunning given the pivotal role Florida played in the 2000 presidential election, when a margin there of 537 votes tipped a victory to George W. Bush."
And a group in Minnesota found by comparing criminal records with voting rolls that more than 1,000 ineligible felons voted in the state's 2008 election that decided a U.S. Senate seat, won by Democrat Al Franken, by 312 votes.
Waiting in line to vote is an inconvenience, but reducing the wait time to zero is not worth it if it jeopardizes the integrity of elections across the United States. If those on the left truly cared about free and fair elections, they would focus on ensuring those allowed to vote have appropriate identification and that voter rolls do not allow people to vote in multiple states.
Couching the lie of "voter suppression" in the guise of "voter access" makes it no less dangerous.
- Marta H. Mossburg is an independent columnist. Contact her at marta@martamossburg.com.
I hate dog movies. In dog movies, the good, loyal, lovable dog always dies at the end and I end up sitting there in the dark with big tears streaming down my cheeks.
May 21, 2013
Mr. President, the buck stops with you.
President Truman set that standard, with these very words posted on a sign on his Oval Office desk.
But now, with over a thousand days left in this second Obama administration, we find a Nixonian stench emerging from the “W. House.”
May 21, 2013
Rarely has the White House briefing room so resembled the main ballroom at a meeting of the Conservative Political Action Conference.
May 21, 2013
I’ve not kept it a secret that I find people who dress their dogs in clothes to be, to put it nicely, somewhat more than just eccentric. And many friendly, helpful readers out there have not kept it a secret that they really wish I would not express my views about dogs dressed as humans.
May 17, 2013
Distrust of government secrecy has been elevated to an exceptional level with the disclosure the Justice Department covertly examined two months of Associated Press phone records to determine who leaked details to the AP about a foiled terrorist plot.
May 17, 2013
The federal government recently announced new regulations for buying fast food.
May 17, 2013
It sounds like the plot from a dystopian libertarian novel. The word “patriot” and the phrase “educating on the Constitution and Bill of Rights” triggered heightened scrutiny from the most intrusive agency in the federal government.
May 17, 2013
The action at the bird feeder has been spectacular lately: Cardinals, finches, songbirds in impressive variety crowding around all day long in search of sustenance. It is truly gratifying …
For my neighbor.
That’s what it’s like at his feeder.
May 14, 2013
On April 27, Dr. Jeff Butts demonstrated a rare form of servant leadership as he participated in the Go Love Indy westside service project.
May 13, 2013
Everyone presumes that Sen. Chuck Schumer, the media-hungry Democrat from New York, wants to be the next Senate majority leader. His performance in the negotiations over the Gang of Eight immigration plan should bolster his case for an eventual promotion.
May 13, 2013
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An NPR broadcast examines the question of how communities can better prepare for tornadoes like the one that struck Moore, Okla. on Monday. The broadcast features commentary from Michael Fitzgerald, who reported a five-part disaster series for the CNHI News Service.
May 22, 2013 1 Photo
Complete Report:
Part I: Are We Prepared? | Part II: Disaster Dollars
Part III: Lessons Learned | Part IV: Warning Signs
Part V: The Big One
Shayla Taylor was so far along in labor that her nurses at Moore Medical Center decided not to move her when Monday's tornado hit. They waited out the storm in an operating room, where the wall disappeared as the tornado hit the building.
May 23, 2013 1 Photo
An NPR broadcast examines the question of how communities can better prepare for tornadoes like the one that struck Moore, Okla. on Monday. The broadcast features commentary from Michael Fitzgerald, who reported a five-part disaster series for the CNHI News Service.
May 22, 2013 1 Photo
Complete Report:
Part I: Are We Prepared? | Part II: Disaster Dollars
Part III: Lessons Learned | Part IV: Warning Signs
Part V: The Big One
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