http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/18/opinion/l18vote.htmlFrom the NYTimes LTTE today:
To the Editor:
Re "Georgia's New Poll Tax" (editorial, Sept. 12):
Georgia should set an example and provide free voting ID cards. It is unconscionable that a state would charge residents for a voter ID.
The Department of Motor Vehicles or the Department of Human Resources could provide a simple ID with proof of identity. Human Resources already requires identification to receive state services. How much harder is it to take a picture?
Standard proof of identity and proof of residency should be all that is needed to obtain this ID.
As a former Georgia resident, I know that each county has a D.M.V. and a human services department that should be available for this purpose. Georgia needs to be a progressive example to the rest of the country.
This law in its current form faces an inevitable court challenge. Can Georgia afford to lay open its old wounds for the world to see? I think not.
To the Editor:
Georgia's new voter ID law purports to address fraud, but it is clearly intended to discourage poor people from voting. Why else charge $20 for a five-year card but $35 for a 10-year card? The cost of printing the two cards is the same.
http://www.wpherald.com/storyview.php?StoryID=20050904-091529-6543rGeorgia voter-ID statute assailed
By Brian DeBose
The Washington Times
Published September 4, 2005
WASHINGTON -- A new voter-identification law in Georgia that recently was approved by the Justice Department has angered civil rights groups, which say it will disenfranchise blacks, the elderly and rural voters.
State legislators said the new law requiring voters to present a photo identification, such as a driver's license or a state school ID, will prevent voter fraud and keep noncitizens from voting.
"We just thought that it was a common-sense measure, given a pattern of voter fraud over time in Georgia," said state Senate Majority Leader Bill Stephens, a Republican. "Our existing law that was in place allowed for 17 different forms of so-called 'identification.'"
Mr. Stephens cited investigations showing numerous instances of voter fraud, including a 1998 state Senate election in which election officials "miraculously" discovered 151 previously uncounted ballots three days after the Democratic incumbent was defeated.
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