Judge won't halt Pa. voter identification law
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - A tough new voter identification law championed by Republicans can take effect in Pennsylvania for November's presidential election, a judge ruled Wednesday, despite a torrent of criticism that it will suppress votes among President Barack Obama's supporters and make it harder for the elderly, disabled, poor and young adults to vote.
Commonwealth Court Judge Robert Simpson said he would not grant an injunction that would have halted the law, which requires each voter to show a valid photo ID. Opponents are expected to file an appeal within a day or two to the state Supreme Court as the Nov. 6 election looms.
"We're not done, it's not over," said Witold J. Walczak, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who helped argue the case for the plaintiffs. "It's why they make appeals courts."
The Republican-penned law - which passed over the objections of Democrats - has ignited a furious debate over voting rights as Pennsylvania is poised to play a key role in deciding the presidential contest. Plaintiffs, including a 93-year-old woman who recalled marching with Martin Luther King Jr. in 1960, had asked Simpson to block the law from taking effect in this year's election as part of a wider challenge to its constitutionality.
Republicans defend the law as necessary to protect the integrity of the election. But Democrats say the law will make it harder for people who lack ID for valid reasons to vote.
Opponents portray the law as a partisan scheme to help the Republican challenger, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, beat Obama. Their passionate objections were inflamed in June when the state's Republican House leader boasted to a Republican gathering that the new photo ID requirement "is going to allow Gov. Romney to win the state" in November.
Simpson, a Republican, didn't rule on the full merits of the case, only whether to grant a preliminary injunction stopping it from taking effect.
In his 70-page opinion, Simpson said the plaintiffs "did an excellent job of 'putting a face' to those burdened by the voter ID requirement," but he said he didn't have the luxury of deciding the case based on sympathy. Rather, he said he believed that state officials and agencies were actively resolving problems with the law and that they would carry it out in a "nonpartisan, even-handed manner."
The law, he said, is neutral, nondiscriminatory and applies uniformly to all voters. Speculation about the potential problems in issuing valid photo IDs or confusion on Election Day did not warrant "invalidation of all lawful applications" of it, he wrote.
Plus, more harm would result from halting the law, he said.
"This is because the process of implementation in general, and of public outreach and education in particular, is much harder to start, or restart, than it is to stop," Simpson wrote.
At the state Supreme Court, votes by four justices would be needed to overturn Simpson's ruling. The high court is currently split between three Republicans and three Democrats following the recent suspension of Justice Joan Orie Melvin, a Republican who is fighting criminal corruption charges.
The original Republican rationale for the law - to prevent election fraud - played little role in the court case. Government lawyers acknowledged that they are "not aware of any incidents of in person voter fraud." Instead, they insisted that lawmakers properly exercised their latitude to make election-related laws.
Republican Gov. Tom Corbett signed the law in March after every single Democratic lawmaker voted against it.
At issue is the requirement that all Pennsylvania voters produce a valid photo ID before their ballot can be counted, a substantial change from the law it was designed to replace. That law required identification only for people voting in a polling place for the first time and it allowed nonphoto documents such as a utility bill or bank statement.
Some of the people who sued say they will be unable to vote because they lack the necessary documents, including a birth certificate, to get a state photo ID, the most widely available of the IDs that are valid under the new law.
The lawyers who provided free legal representation to the plaintiffs also warned that it will be difficult for many others to get a valid ID, and they presented testimony about workers at Department of Transportation license centers who appeared uninformed about the requirement to issue free nondriver photo IDs.
In addition, some voters won't know about the law until they get to the polls, and long waits will result while untrained election workers struggle to carry out a complicated and unnecessary law amid the traditionally larger turnout in presidential elections, they argued.
Lawyers from the attorney general's office, which defended the law, pointed out that the state is planning to begin issuing a special photo ID card for registered voters who are unable to get a PennDOT-issued ID and lack other acceptable photo IDs, such as passports or active-duty military IDs.
In addition, they say the state is rolling out a public relations campaign to make people aware of the law.
The Department of State, which oversees elections in Pennsylvania, has not produced any kind of study or survey that estimates the number of people without a valid photo ID that is required by the law.
Meanwhile, Obama's Department of Justice is looking at whether the new law complies with federal laws and has asked the state's top election official and a chief supporter of the law for a long list of information about it.
Commonwealth Court Judge Robert Simpson said he would not grant an injunction that would have halted the law, which requires each voter to show a valid photo ID. Opponents are expected to file an appeal within a day or two to the state Supreme Court as the Nov. 6 election looms.
"We're not done, it's not over," said Witold J. Walczak, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who helped argue the case for the plaintiffs. "It's why they make appeals courts."
The Republican-penned law - which passed over the objections of Democrats - has ignited a furious debate over voting rights as Pennsylvania is poised to play a key role in deciding the presidential contest. Plaintiffs, including a 93-year-old woman who recalled marching with Martin Luther King Jr. in 1960, had asked Simpson to block the law from taking effect in this year's election as part of a wider challenge to its constitutionality.
Republicans defend the law as necessary to protect the integrity of the election. But Democrats say the law will make it harder for people who lack ID for valid reasons to vote.
Opponents portray the law as a partisan scheme to help the Republican challenger, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, beat Obama. Their passionate objections were inflamed in June when the state's Republican House leader boasted to a Republican gathering that the new photo ID requirement "is going to allow Gov. Romney to win the state" in November.
Simpson, a Republican, didn't rule on the full merits of the case, only whether to grant a preliminary injunction stopping it from taking effect.
In his 70-page opinion, Simpson said the plaintiffs "did an excellent job of 'putting a face' to those burdened by the voter ID requirement," but he said he didn't have the luxury of deciding the case based on sympathy. Rather, he said he believed that state officials and agencies were actively resolving problems with the law and that they would carry it out in a "nonpartisan, even-handed manner."
The law, he said, is neutral, nondiscriminatory and applies uniformly to all voters. Speculation about the potential problems in issuing valid photo IDs or confusion on Election Day did not warrant "invalidation of all lawful applications" of it, he wrote.
Plus, more harm would result from halting the law, he said.
"This is because the process of implementation in general, and of public outreach and education in particular, is much harder to start, or restart, than it is to stop," Simpson wrote.
At the state Supreme Court, votes by four justices would be needed to overturn Simpson's ruling. The high court is currently split between three Republicans and three Democrats following the recent suspension of Justice Joan Orie Melvin, a Republican who is fighting criminal corruption charges.
The original Republican rationale for the law - to prevent election fraud - played little role in the court case. Government lawyers acknowledged that they are "not aware of any incidents of in person voter fraud." Instead, they insisted that lawmakers properly exercised their latitude to make election-related laws.
Republican Gov. Tom Corbett signed the law in March after every single Democratic lawmaker voted against it.
At issue is the requirement that all Pennsylvania voters produce a valid photo ID before their ballot can be counted, a substantial change from the law it was designed to replace. That law required identification only for people voting in a polling place for the first time and it allowed nonphoto documents such as a utility bill or bank statement.
Some of the people who sued say they will be unable to vote because they lack the necessary documents, including a birth certificate, to get a state photo ID, the most widely available of the IDs that are valid under the new law.
The lawyers who provided free legal representation to the plaintiffs also warned that it will be difficult for many others to get a valid ID, and they presented testimony about workers at Department of Transportation license centers who appeared uninformed about the requirement to issue free nondriver photo IDs.
In addition, some voters won't know about the law until they get to the polls, and long waits will result while untrained election workers struggle to carry out a complicated and unnecessary law amid the traditionally larger turnout in presidential elections, they argued.
Lawyers from the attorney general's office, which defended the law, pointed out that the state is planning to begin issuing a special photo ID card for registered voters who are unable to get a PennDOT-issued ID and lack other acceptable photo IDs, such as passports or active-duty military IDs.
In addition, they say the state is rolling out a public relations campaign to make people aware of the law.
The Department of State, which oversees elections in Pennsylvania, has not produced any kind of study or survey that estimates the number of people without a valid photo ID that is required by the law.
Meanwhile, Obama's Department of Justice is looking at whether the new law complies with federal laws and has asked the state's top election official and a chief supporter of the law for a long list of information about it.
Hmmm? So making sure a voter is legit is suppressing who from voting?
This is happening in many states controlled by Republicans right now, not just Penn.Â
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In one particular state (I forget) the Republicans are expanding early voting in GOP districts, but not expanding them in Democratic districts. How? Easy. These election boards are controlled 50/50 by Dem/Rep, so if there is a tie, the Secretary of State casts the final vote. No big surprise, the Secretary is voting to expand the rights in the GOP districts but voting the same plan down in Dem districts.
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Gotta love local politics!Â
I guess if Republican's can't win on their record then voter suppression makes sense from a purely utilitarian perspective.
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Just another indication of the moral depravity of today's Republican party.
If this law had been in effect when queen Christine was going through the last two elections, she would of never been "elected".
 @jeeprex:Â
Doubtful, since "this law"applies to voters in PENNSYLVANIA, which means it has no legal standing in Washington election laws.
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But nice try...
 @JeepRex [citation needed]
http://ricochet.com/intel/Has-voter-fraud-been-a-demonstrated-problem-in-recent-U.S.-history
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If you go to this link, scroll down to the answer provided by "John Murdoch" It outlines the steps that some take for close elections. Frightening.Â
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Fraud is not a problem in most contests because the gap between winner and loser is too vast. and if something is too hard for the Progs it's not worth doing. Only in important, closely contested races will the Forces of Dark wield their vampire teeth into the exposed neck of our Republic.
"despite a torrent of criticism that it will suppress votes among President Barack Obama's supporters"
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That statement says it all. Why would it suppress votes for Obama and not Romney? Seems like an admission that only losers that can't or won't get an ID vote for Democrats. Â
Some persepctive on voter fraud..Â
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/08/08/jon-stewart-voter-id-laws-like-leash-laws-for-unicorns/
FTA:
Conservatives have described voter fraud as a âserious threat to democracy.â But even the National Republican Lawyers Association, which supports voter ID laws, was only able to find 340 cases of voter fraud over a ten year period.
âOh, my god. Thatâs almost .7 cases per state per year,â Stewart said. âAnd it also includes registration fraud, registering the wrong address, writing Mickey Mouse on a petition â which voter ID would not address.â
Â
.,.....
"Next up, leash laws for unicorns.â
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Yeah its Jon Stewart. Deal with it. The stats come from The National REPUBLICAN lawyers Association.Â
340 cases over 10 years. Â
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 @T H I S A misleading statistic. Only  in CLOSE elections will nefarious parties do their dastardly work.  I posit that if took those 340 cases and divided  them into the number of races decided within a half a percent or so i, it would be  a significant percentage. I will research further...
it is 340 cases... over ten years... across the country.  And it even includes things like people writing "micky mouse" on the ballot or voting from the wrong address.
 @Sid Vishess Well you were only comparing laws designed to keep certain people from voting to lynchings
While the rest of us are comparying laws deisgned to keep certain people from voting to laws designed to keep certain people from voting.
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Clearly you can not tel the difference.
interesting.
 @T H I S You mean like Jim Crow Laws being compared to voter ID laws? Why, YES... yes I have.  Thanks for bringing that up.
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You know, having an Obama bundler and advisor steal $1.6 Billion  is pretty rare. Guess we don't need a law about that.
 @Sid Vishess because lynchings are just like voter fraud?
Have you ever heard of a false equivalence?
and per Murdoch:
And how it "can be done" =/= how it has been done
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 @T H I S So if there were 340 lynchings...over ten years across the country?  Guess that would be OK. Hey, what's 340 over ten years.?
Â
I posted this link that explains how "fraud" can sort of legally done. See John Murdoch."
http://ricochet.com/intel/Has-voter-fraud-been-a-demonstrated-problem-in-recent-U.S.-history
This Obama voter marched with King but somehow in the past 30-40 plus years she can't find the time to get down to the local courthouse to get an ID!!
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.... including a 93-year-old woman who recalled marching with Martin Luther King Jr. in 1960, had asked Simpson to block the law from taking effect in this year's election as part of a wider challenge to its constitutionality.
@Truth Percolates:
In the previous story about this issue, it went into greater detail about the woman mentioned here who marched with MLK. She has tried THREE TIMES to get her birth certificate through the state's department of records, so that she could then get the photo ID.. To date, the state has never sent it.
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She has voted in every election for over 50 years now yet because she lacks the photo ID she will now be denied the ability to vote in this fall's election. If she was considered "valifd" for 50 years previously, why is she now "invalid" simply because she does not have the photo ID? I would call that supressing her vote.
 @Truth Percolates and therefore the republicans are not using this made up issue of voter fraud as an excuse to supress voting even though republicans have come out ad admitted, "yeah its about voter suppression."Â
Â
You are dishonest, and you have no character.Â
I would like to add this to the debate: voter suppression should be illegal, as illegal as voter fraud. Denying an American his or her right to vote because they do not hold a certain state's recognized ID is ridicules. There should be a federal law that will not allow a state to hold a general election until that state's ID problem has been resolved
@left-center In order to vote, you must be a legal US citizen. So, if you are a legal citizen you should have no trouble at all getting a legal ID. So, requiring you to prove your legal right to vote is somehow being defined as supression? Seems to me that this is more of a scare tactic to overturn the law and allow an illegal imigrant voting base to throw votes to the Democrats...
 @TheBronze Since illegal immigrants are illegal, then I would assume they would want to vote for the bigger crooks of the two parties which is of course the Republican Party. But joking aside, what proof do you have that illegals vote for Democrats more than Republicans, or even vote at all?
@albion No more proof than the Democrats and the ACLU have that requiring a state ID will prevent people from voting.....
 @albion  Look at it this way. Illegal immigrants will vote for who ever is for giving them more free stuff- Democrats.Â
This law should be nation wide. If you don't have an ID, you don't vote. Its pretty simple.
 @jeeprex:Â
What about places such as Washington State that have "all mail" elections? There's nobody to check photo ID - *anybody* could be filling out a ballot, and there is no way to verify who did it.
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So tell me again how photo ID is preventing fraud???
 @JeepRex was that the vision of our Founding Fathers?
 @left-center The "Founding Fathers" wanted distance between the masses and the outcome, that's one of the reasons why the Electoral College system was put into place.  Our "Founding Fathers" also felt that no one without "skin in the game" should vote.  They knew what would happen when the masses of non-productive people who are not contributing to the system but instead are only parasiting off of it, were allowed to vote... and that's exactly what has happened.  And we see the sad results today. Â
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If anything, the voting privilege should be constrained, not expanded.
 @T H I S Hey, he brought up the "Founding Fathers" and what their "vision" to be... you're right, their vision was much different from our "modern" viewpoint....and that's exactly my point!
 @left-center Well, drug-testing laws aka "p-tests" are legal and used all the time to qualify people for employment... they certainly assume you are guilty until proven innocent!
 @jeeprex:Â
In the previous story about this issue, it went into greater detail about the woman mentioned here who marched with MLK. She has tried THREE TIMES to get her birth certificate through the state's department of records, so that she could then get the photo ID.. To date, the state has never sent it.Â
Â
She has voted in every election for over 50 years now yet because she lacks the photo ID she will now be denied the ability to vote in this fall's election. If she was considered "valifd" for 50 years previously, why is she now "invalid" simply because she does not have the photo ID? I would call that supressing her vote.
Â
Since she has voted in 50 years' worth of elections, wouldn't the fact that she already "exists" on the voter registration rolls be considered proof of her eligibility to vote?
 @JeepRex There are existing laws for voter fraud and this is not new. For over 235 years this Nation has had general elections, do you not think that one time or another there may have been some voter fraud in a general election. This is different the GOP made a pact in 2008 before Obama was even sworn into office that their one and only goal was to make Obama a one term president. Now they may be successful, but surely padding their bet by suppressing legal voter rolls by requiring a specific kind of voter ID card is not going to hinder their success.
 @left-center How so? You are not charged with any crime. Simply requiring oneself to be positivity identified prior to voting is only a issue for those trying to fool the system.
 @JeepRex But there are issues JeepRex. At the very heart of the Pa. law a legal voter has to prove his legitimacy via a state recognized ID in order to vote. As I had commented to another blogger this law assumes you are guilty until you have proven your innocence.
 @TheTruncheonÂ
"Our "Founding Fathers" also felt that no one without "skin in the game" should vote."
---------------------------
Like women, blacks, none wealthy....
Â
 @left-center There is no "Voter suppression". If you are legal to vote, and a US citizen, then there should be no issues.
 @TheTruncheon I understand your point, but what has the comment got to do with legal voter suppression?
Everything you need to know about this law in one neat quote.Â
"Â Voter ID, which is gonna allow Governor Romney to win the state of Pennsylvania, done,â"
-Pennsylvania House majority leader Mike Turzai (R-tard)
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The hysterical over-reaction by our Progressive friends continues. If as much effort was put forth to help anyone without their ID to get it...
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Somewhere, a truckload of ballots sits forlorn and unloved. And all marked with "D." Just in case.
 @Sid Vishess It is true Sid, progressive activists should be helping the people without the recognized ID get a form of ID that the state will accept. Let see, what group of progressive activists has championed the this cohort before... Ah, that's right ACORN. Oh seems ACORN is out of business, crushed by America's right-wing.
@left-center @Sid VishessÂ
ACORN was crushed by their own stupidity. They had no one to blame for their demise but themselves. They thought with an African American running for President no one would dare question their methods.
 @Mej47 Actually all of the defeat ACORN accolades should go to FOX News and that video hoaxter James O'Keefe
@left-center  No, that's what happened.
 @Mej47 That is what the right-wing would have you believe.
Coming this fall... He's back... And voter suppression has a new ally, in an old face.
Â
Jim Crow 2: Wrath of the Baggers
A straw man will rise.
Pretty slick. A swing state, rooting out ineligible voters by denying all voters without state recognized I.D. the chance to cast their vote. Another totalitarian enactment placed on the free citizens of Pennsylvania that will impact the vote for the elderly, disabled, the poor and young people.
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The State claims it is planning to distribute special ID cards for registered voters, but that plan will probably not come in time for the general election.
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Has anyone noticed that the only states that will deny voters access to the polls for insufficient ID are state with Republican governors and/or attorney generals. Talk about stuffing the ballot box!
@left-center  Has anyone noticed that the states that continue to allow voting without proof of citizenship are controlled by Democrat Governors and Democrat legislatures. If only legitimate ctizens can vote hey lose part of their base.
 @Mej47 There are laws that weed out and prosecute illegal voters already on the books. This action being taken in Pa. is nothing more than voter suppression.
 @thebronze:Â
In the previous story about this issue, it went into greater detail about the woman mentioned here who marched with MLK. She has tried THREE TIMES to get her birth certificate through the state's department of records, so that she could then get the photo ID.. To date, the state has never sent it. She has voted in every election for over 50 years now yet because she lacks the photo ID she will now be denied the ability to vote in this fall's election. If she was considered "valifd" for 50 years previously, why is she now "invalid" simply because she does not have the photo ID? I would call that supressing her vote.
 @mej47:Â
Which to me says that illegal voters are an extremely small portion of the overall ballots cast in any election. This article even states that there has NEVER been a case if "in person voter fraud" - so why require ID now?
@JeepRex and next thing we know you will be making strawman arguments.
Â
oh wait...
 @left-center Try to go get an enhanced drivers license with a student ID, or welfare card. You will be denied. Next you will claim that it is driver suppression because you cannot get a drivers license with out an official birth certificate, etc.
 @TheBronze It is not a question of having ID it is that the ID you have must be recognized by the State. A legal voter shows up at his or her polling place without the recognized ID forget about it because you ain't even getting in the place. The assumption that all adults drive or should have an ID card if they do not is not enough evidence to validate the Pa. Law. Why are Medicare cards or a Welfare cards or a student ID cards considered invalid? They are all forms of legal identification.
 @TheBronze Because even republicans admit it is about voter supression.
this is a direct quote:
Â
"Â Voter ID, which is gonna allow Governor Romney to win the state of Pennsylvania, done,â"
-Pennsylvania House majority leader Mike Turzai
How is requiring a valid ID supressing voting? Just about everyone of legal voting age has a drivers license or should have an ID if they don't drive. Â
 @Mej47 May be true, would have to validate it, but that doesn't answer the question why is it necessary to suppress the votes of legal voters? Isn't one of most precious ideals that we are all innocent until proven guilty?
@left-center  And how often are illegal voters prosecuted for their actions. Almost never.
The last general election in WA state turned up over 1000 illegal votes cast in King county and I've yet to see a report that any of these folks were charged, let alone punished for casting illegal votes.