Two Philadelphia Dems Sponsor Bill to Overturn Voter ID
Two Northwest Philadelphia Democrats are introducing a bill to overturn Pennsylvania's photo ID law for voting, which takes full effect this November.
Two Northwest Philadelphia Democrats are introducing a bill to overturn Pennsylvania's photo ID law for voting, which takes full effect this November.
Madison - A pair of appeals court rulings make clear the state's new voter ID law will remain suspended through the May and June recall elections.
Columnist David Limbaugh, brother of Rush, asks in a recent column, "Can anyone think of an innocuous reason that President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder oppose state voter ID laws?" The correct answer is definitely "No!"
A U.S. appeals court on Tuesday ruled that Arizona may require voters to show identification at the polls, a ruling likely to add fuel to the fiery debate about voting rights in a presidential election year.
A new Rasmussen survey shows that 73 percent of Americans say that requiring a photo ID before voting does not discriminate against anyone, and 64 percent regard voter fraud as at least a somewhat serious problem..
Columnist asks: Can anyone think of an innocuous reason that President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder oppose state voter ID laws?
The Minnesota chapter of Common Cause and the American Civil Liberties Union are preparing a lawsuit against a constitutional amendment ballot measure that would establish a photo ID requirement for voting.
In North Carolina, where Gov. Bev. Perdue vetoed a photo ID law in 2011, three-quarters of voters in a survey said they supported such a law.
Dealt a setback in court, a Missouri House committee acted quickly Tuesday to embrace new wording for a 2012 ballot measure that would allow a photo identification mandate to be imposed upon voters in future elections.
The American Civil Liberties Union and the NAACP say they will sue over Pennsylvania's month-old voter ID law, and two Philadelphia Democrats are sponsoring a bill repealing it.