Panel to urge voter ID, streamlined election system

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Desertdog

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Let the howels of outrage begin. Then see who recommended such a drastic action. None other than the beloved former President Carter. I am all for it along with everybody having to re-register, showing an ID. Get the voter rolls cleaned up.

Panel to urge voter ID, streamlined election system
Aims for efficiency, restoring confidence
By Dan Balz, Washington Post | September 19, 2005
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/w...to_urge_voter_id_streamlined_election_system/

WASHINGTON -- Warning that public confidence in the nation's election system is flagging, a commission headed by former president Jimmy Carter and former secretary of state James A. Baker III will call today for significant changes in how Americans vote, including photo identification cards for all voters, verifiable paper trails for electronic voting machines, and impartial administration of elections.

The report concludes that, despite changes required under the Help America Vote Act of 2002, far more must be done to restore integrity to an election system that suffers from sloppy management, that treats voters differently from state to state and within states, and that too often frustrates rather than encourages voters' efforts to participate in what is considered a basic American right.

The 2002 federal legislation grew out of the disputed election of 2000 and is not yet fully implemented. But the Carter-Baker commission said that, even with some important changes, the 2004 election was marred by many of the same errors as the 2000 election. ''Had the margin of victory for the [2004] presidential contest been narrower, the lengthy dispute that followed the 2000 election could have been repeated," the report states.

Disputes over the counting of provisional ballots, the accuracy of registration lists, long lines at some polling places, timely administration of absentee ballots, and questions about the security of some electronic voting machines tarnished the 2004 elections.

Many protests were made in Ohio, where President Bush narrowly defeated Senator John F. Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, last year. Although there has been no credible evidence of partisan manipulation of the election in Ohio, the criticisms there and elsewhere have renewed calls for a more uniform, trustworthy, and nonpartisan election system across the country.

Commission leaders say the goal of the panel's 87 recommendations -- at an estimated cost of $1.35 billion -- is to make participation easier while also enhancing ballot integrity, a careful balancing of the longstanding argument between Democrats and Republicans in the administration of elections.

The most controversial recommendation calls for all voters to produce a standard photo identification card before being allowed to vote. The commission proposes that, by 2010, voters be required to use either the REAL ID card, which Congress this spring mandated as the drivers license of the future in all states. For about 12 percent of eligible voters who do not have a drivers license, the commission says states should provide at no cost an identification card that contains the same key information.

Critics of voter ID cards say the requirement could intimidate or discourage some Americans, particularly senior citizens, the poor, and minorities, from participating in elections, and could raise privacy issues. To alleviate those concerns, the Carter-Baker commission urges states to make it easy for nondrivers to obtain such cards and measures to ensure privacy and security for all voters. The commission report states that by adopting a uniform voter ID card, minorities would be better protected from shifting standards for identification at individual polling places.

Still, the proposed ID card drew sharp dissent from some commissioners, among them former Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle, who along with two commissioners likened the ID to a ''modern day poll tax."

Both parties engaged in massive voter registration drives in 2004, but inaccurate voter lists produced many of the disputes on Election Day. The 2002 election reform act mandated states to oversee voter lists, but the commission said some states are still relying too much on the counties to produce the data and called on states to take responsibility for the accuracy of the lists.

The 2002 act required the use of provision ballots for any eligible voter who shows up at a polling place but whose name is not on a registration list, but the 2004 election produced disparate standards for determining which of those ballots were counted. Alaska counted 97 percent of its provision ballots, but Delaware counted 6 percent, according to the commission. The group recommends states set uniform standards.

About 9 million Americans move from one state to another in any given year. The commission cited news reports contending that almost 46,000 voters from New York City were also registered in Florida. The panel recommended the US Election Assistance Commission oversee a system to allow easy sharing of state voter databases as well as requiring the use of a uniform identifier -- the voter's Social Security number -- to help eliminate duplicate registrations.

The Florida recount in 2000 etched the image of the ''hanging chad" in the minds of many Americans and spurred the shift to electronic, rather than paper, ballots. But flaws in the new computerized systems have led to doubts about their accuracy. The commission calls on Congress to require that all electronic machines include the capacity for a paper trail that voters can use to verify their vote. Beyond that, to alleviate concerns that machines can be maliciously programmed or hacked, the panel calls for new standards to verify that machines are secure.

Another change designed to restore confidence in elections calls for moving to nonpartisan and independent administration of elections, in the states and on the US Election Assistance Commission.

The integrity of the Ohio system was challenged in part because the chief election official, Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell, also served as the Ohio cochairman for the Bush-Cheney campaign.

The Commission on Federal Election Reform was created under the auspices of American University's Center for Democracy and Election Management. The group was funded by several foundations, and Robert A. Pastor of American University served as executive director. Its membership included Republicans, Democrats, and Independents.
 
and impartial administration of elections

I didn't have to read very far before I got to the comment quoted - this apparently means that our election processes are going to outsourced to India. Let's face it, finding "impartial" people here is impossible with the way this country has become polarized. Once they move this stuff offshore the cost should come down to about $171.54 and not the $1.35 billion mentioned in the report.
 
I think it sounds great. The Democrats will hate it, though. It will make it much harder for them to cheat with phantom voters, dead voters, multiple-state voters, etc., etc.

It's funny/pathetic that someone thinks there are "privacy issues" relating to voter registration. Voter rolls are public documents, and needfully so.
 
Why Not? We have drivers lic., soc. sec. cards, CCW lic. we are documented out the rear. So why not one that shows you are a citizen. Will that help NO.
Have you heard of Forgery?
They do it to Drivers Lic. Soc. Sec. cards, pass ports so what would prevent some one from forgeing one of them
 
I dunno. Spend less than one percent of the Iraq war cost to spread freedom and democracy to the U.S.? Sounds like a bargain! :D
 
OK, to those who will whine about old people and the poor getting left out:

If you want to be sure that everyone has an ID all you have to do is make photo ID (Not drivers licenses) more available. Put up more local offices and mabee go to the old folks homes once a year or so to renew those with old ID. Most people need photo ID to do most things anyway.
 
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