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GOP-Led States Move To Change Voting Rules Ahead Of 2012

First Posted: 09/19/2011 8:51 am Updated: 11/19/2011 4:12 am

By ANN SANNER, ASSOCIATED PRESS

(AP) COLUMBUS, Ohio — After years of expanding when and how people can vote, state legislatures now under new Republican control are moving to trim early voting days, beef up identification requirements and put new restrictions on how voters are notified about absentee ballots.

Democrats claim their GOP counterparts are using midterm election wins to enforce changes favorable to Republicans ahead of the 2012 presidential election. They criticize such legislation, saying it could lead to longer lines in Democratic-leaning urban areas and discourage people from voting.

Supporters say bolstering ID rules helps prevent fraud. And at a time when counties face tough budgets, they contend local elections officials don't have the money to keep early voting locations staffed and opened.

The process of changing voting rules may be nonpartisan on the surface but it is seething with politics just below the surface.

"We've had nothing short of a rhetorical firefight for years between the folks who are worried about fraud and folks who are worried about disenfranchisement – a firefight which is pretty much neatly broken down between the two major parties," said Doug Chapin, an election expert at the University of Minnesota.

While states typically adjust voting rules ahead of presidential elections, this year provides an opportunity for new Republican governors and GOP majorities to legislate on election issues.

Put simply, Chapin said: "What's happening in 2011 is just as much about what happened in 2010."

New voting rules recently cleared state legislatures in what have traditionally been presidential battlegrounds, creating partisan rancor.

Plans to reduce the number of days to cast an early ballot cleared the Republican-controlled swing states of Florida, Ohio and Wisconsin. Legislatures in Georgia, Tennessee and West Virginia also lopped off advanced-voting time. North Carolina has a pending proposal. And Maine has done away with a policy that allows people to register at the polls on Election Day before casting ballots.

Each party, when in control, seeks to rewrite the rules to its electoral advantage.

Although the reality may not be so cut and dried, both parties believe a looser voting regimen benefits Democrats because it increases opportunities for Hispanic, black, immigrant and poor people – harder to reach for an Election Day turnout – to vote.

Democratic voters held an edge in early voting during the 2010 elections, despite the unfavorable climate for the party nationally and the eventual Republican gains.

Voters in 32 states and the District of Columbia can cast a ballot in person before Election Day without having to give a reason.

Georgia and Ohio had some of the longest early voting time periods. Georgia had 45 days, while Ohio had 35. The new laws bring the two states closer to the typical timeframe, which is about two weeks before the election.

The move to shrink the early voting window in some states comes as others have pushed to require voters to show a photo ID at the polls.

Five states – Kansas, Wisconsin, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas – recently passed strict photo ID laws. At the beginning of the year, just two states – Georgia and Indiana – required that voters must show a photo ID in order to have their vote counted.

Other legislatures are rewriting their state's election laws in other ways.

Florida rolled back its early voting time to one week from two in an overhaul that also makes it more difficult for groups such as the League of Women Voters and the Boy Scouts of America to conduct voter registration drives.

Ohio's top elections chief, a Republican, acknowledged that changes to voting rules have invited an overreaction from each party.

"Both sides of the political spectrum have found it advantageous from a fundraising point of view, from a motivating their base point of view, to call into question the confidence in the election system," Secretary of State Jon Husted said in an interview.

While Ohio's overhaul bans local boards of elections from mailing unsolicited absentee ballot requests to voters, Husted has agreed to have the state send the requests to voters in all counties in 2012.

Ohio's law is not yet in effect, and opponents are working to get a proposed repeal question on the fall 2012 ballot. The legislation ignited debate early this summer on the floors of the state's GOP-controlled General Assembly.

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12:28 AM on 10/08/2011
Been looking for a smart comeback from the “Democrat Party” line for years.

There is a word I'd like to see popularized for a political party that has settled on disenfranchisement as a core state and national policy:

Cheatublican Party

Seems to fit in with this post rather well, as well as other stories from the HuffPo. If you like it, feel free to pass it on. Cheatublicans need to be watched very carefully in 2012. Keep on the good work, Ann.
12:11 PM on 10/07/2011
Next step: microchipping minorities like dogs.....(sarcasm)
While I do agree that all votes should be valid, it's unfair that these laws disproportionally affect the people who need social programs which the GOP tends to eschew. These policies should at least include some sort of provision which would waive the fee for an issued ID in the case of financial need, for instance, living at or below the poverty line et cetera. I'm still waiting for SC Gov. Haley to fill up her van with the 178,000 ID-lackers. http://bit.ly/nGWSsz (Politics aside, the calculations which estimate it taking nearly 7 1/2 years for her to fulfill promise are pretty funny.)
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manntxs
I opted out cause I don't need no stinkin badges.
12:53 PM on 09/22/2011
There are only two sides on this issue. One is to get as many votes as possible regardless if valid or not. The other is only valid votes should be allowed. You have to prove your residence to establish your proper precinct. You should therefore have to show you are a citizen to verify your right to vote.
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Cacey
Ignore rudeness, honor discussion
01:24 PM on 09/22/2011
I don't disagree with your basic premise. I do disagree that drivers lincences and SS Cards, both of which can be easily faked should be used as Voter ID. Perhaps voter ID is something that should not be left up to individual states. Perhaps voting should not be left up to individual states except for state and local elections.
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manntxs
I opted out cause I don't need no stinkin badges.
02:31 PM on 09/22/2011
In the state I am in now establishing citizenship through a drivers license or i.d. automatically registers you to vote. The only abuse I can see in that would be getting to the poll without a photo i.d. and having to sign an affidavit. That can be abused.

For me, and sharpton admitted as much, this is an issue of cutting out a demographic that would tend to favor a particular party is what is being objected to. The problem is, if the demographic is one of non citizenship, why is there a problem. If the other issue that has been brought up about inconvenience, cost etc. Well, we have a lot of citizens that have served and suffered consequences in their service, including death, so I don't cotton to someone complaining about some inconvenience even if it costs a little bit. After all, if they are that poor the government, us, are usually supporting them financially.

Don't get me wrong...my response to you isn't directed at you just further clarifying my thoughts and feelings on the issue.

Thanks, btw, for a civil response.
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Aaron Haynes
Not your enemy
09:14 PM on 10/03/2011
Voter suppression is thousands of times more problematic than voter fraud, which is rare and almost always caught. The idea of people voting 10 or 20 times is a Republican boogeyman used to enact restrictive laws that mysteriously suppress democratic voting blocks.
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manntxs
I opted out cause I don't need no stinkin badges.
09:55 PM on 10/03/2011
No one is suppressing a citizen from voting and if someone was to attempt to do so it is a crime. And when I see something like your statement of voting 10 or 20 times...overstating weakens the argument. This is simple, you are either a citizen or not. There are to many ways to skirt the law. I know as I have worked the polls.

And your most telling statement is ''that mysteriously suppress democratic voting blocks''. How can that be possible with any voting law unless illegals are part of that block?
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LivToSki
Half a truth is often a great lie
04:39 AM on 09/22/2011
UN-American and UN-Patriotic.
They should al be ashamed of themselves but, I know the Republicans cannot feel that. Power is their only goal and the rest of us are in the way.
11:29 PM on 09/21/2011
"The price of freedom is eternal vigilance", Thomas Jefferson. Perhaps if Jefferson's picture was on a higher denomination bill the price tag for the lack of vigilance would be more greatly appreciated.
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Rick4646
Union-worker, make working-class strong again
10:41 PM on 09/21/2011
The GOP obviously knows they can't win on their merits with the majority of Americans, a great example is the phony democrats they put in the WI recall elections; they will try to pull every string they can to keep the Democrats from voting; but it won't work.
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39air1
Easy to be brave when you are out of range
10:08 PM on 09/21/2011
Republicans will keep as many people from voting,because they know if each individual vote was counted they would stand a chance. so they scam public to stop them from voting all together.
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adam646l
"Lib" is not a dirty word.
09:08 PM on 09/21/2011
Since when is cheating, lying and stealing to win an election new to the GOP? "Remeber the guy with the "Checkers speech"? Same guy who claimend not to be a "crook" after he was found out for Watergate. What about the Village idot from Crawford who was appointed by Dad's cronies? To me, at least, none of this is news or shocking. We just need to be very vigilant. They know nothing about the very virtues they claim to espouse. Honesty, integrity and fairness. The family valuels guy knocked up Nancy before they were married. Yet he ran on a family falues platform. I guess you have to get a woman pregnant outside of marriage before you can claim to have better values than the next guy.
08:20 PM on 09/21/2011
It's amazing after they lost the presidential election they now want to change to something that is not broken.
06:34 PM on 09/21/2011
Too dumb or too poor to get an ID card is not working with me.
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joyfree
Jaded by life, but ever hopeful...
06:31 PM on 09/21/2011
Hey, I've got it! Let's just institute that National ID card system with a microchip in it or retina scanning. Hard to fake that... Oh, that's right, we're BROKE, aren't we?
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hempster
Let it be said, let it be written, let it be done.
06:04 PM on 09/21/2011
Let's be safe. Know the rules and conform to them. The rules can always be changed when these clowns are tossed.

PS: Join an organization that assist in registrations and help people to the polls. Thanks.
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Angoradebbs
12:31 AM on 09/21/2011
The Republicans have never championed the rights of the poor or middle class, but their association with the Tea Party is abominable. They seem to be going out of their way to accomodate this group. Elected officials and those in government should never be so thoroughly influenced by a radical group that appears to have little or no regard for others that disagree with their political philosophy. They clearly want everything run the way they want it to without giving an ear to other people and other ideas. For them there is no room for compromise, and there is no room for common sense and sanity. The last time a radical group had such a powerful influence on a nation's political system was during the era of the Weimer Republic, and this radical group was called, the National Socialist Party, the Nazis.
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Angoradebbs
12:18 AM on 09/21/2011
This is a form of discrimination. The GOP is trying to squeeze certain groups of people out of the voting pool, and they are actually violating the constitution by doing so.
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10:47 AM on 09/21/2011
Which "certain groups of people" are being squeezed "out of the voting pool?"
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joyfree
Jaded by life, but ever hopeful...
11:25 AM on 09/21/2011
Oops! I meant to reply, NOT fan! ---The people who cannot afford to get a state ID, of course, or have to plan ahead to get a new one if they misplace it.
01:20 PM on 09/21/2011
Dummy, you know, it the usual targets! Anything but White! Ok!
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Mharley vet
“You can run, but you'll just die tired!"
03:13 PM on 09/21/2011
BS! Having an ID for voting is a smart thing to do. We have 20+ million illegals here and should make sure daffy duck doesn't vote 3x. The fraud has got to stop. As for keeping people from voting or intimidating them , well, I point to philly in 08' . But nothing was ever done.
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Angoradebbs
03:44 PM on 09/21/2011
As an African-American, I am always concerned when any political party goes out of its way to make sure that certain people are kept away from the polls. Illegal aliens should not be allowed to vote, I agree. But all eligible American citizens SHOULD be allowed to vote, no matter what neighborhood they come from, race, economic status and background they come from, or what political party they belong to. The GOP clearly want to make sure that there bases are covered, while those that lean more toward the democrats or independants...are shut out somehow. So many people do not realize that Republicans have also historically been opposed to the voting rights act, and would like to throw that out the window too along with every other basic right and gain that America has accomplished in the last 40 yrs. or so. America is so far behind our European counterparts, its almost ridiculous. America has one of the highest infant mortality rates in the industrialized world, and when it comes to access to good affordable healtcare, we also rank low on the list beside other nations in the industrialized world as well. Politicians that keep these stats going should be ashamed of themselves, and Americans need to look a lot more closely at the broken set of systems (healtcare, justice system, monetary equity) that exists in our own country. They're abyssmal.
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39air1
Easy to be brave when you are out of range
10:15 PM on 09/21/2011
No illegal votes where actually counted in election, , i wish people would do research before their rants before spreading Fox rumors.
Sthernbull
I am one of the 53% that pays taxes.
12:15 AM on 09/21/2011
I keep reading liberals on here tlaking about how the GOP cannot win so we have to cheat. "Cannot win"?? DID YOU MISS LAST NOV? WHEN THE DEMOCRATS LOST OVER 700 ELECTED POSITIONS NATION WIDE IN ONE NIGHT? CANNOT WIN???? WE DID NOT LOSE 700 OFFICES IN 1 NIGHT!
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joyfree
Jaded by life, but ever hopeful...
11:26 AM on 09/21/2011
Only because Dems stayed at home, friend.
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Riley Secrist
01:28 PM on 09/21/2011
Oh, so Dems won because they didn't vote? Is that like what happened in Wisconsin, when state legislators left the state and claimed victory?