.
"Mr.
Carter has personal knowledge of why such laws are needed. He recounts
in his book "Turning Point" how his 1962 race for Georgia State Senate
involved a local sheriff who had cast votes for the dead. It took a
recount and court challenge before Mr. Carter was declared the winner."..."After 9/11,
the Justice Department found that eight of the 19 hijackers were
registered to vote."
Nov. 2, 2007, "'This Makes Voter Fraud Easier'," Wall St. Journal, John Fund
"Sen. Hillary Clinton was asked during a debate this week if she
supported New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer's plan to give driver's licenses
to illegal immigrants. At first she seemed to endorse the idea, then
claimed, "I did not say that it should be done, but I certainly
recognize why Governor Spitzer is trying to do it."
The next day
she took a firmer stand (sort of) by offering general support for Gov.
Spitzer's approach, but adding that she hadn't studied his specific
plan. She should, and so should the rest of us. It stops just short of
being an engraved invitation for people to commit voter fraud.
The
background here is the National Voter Registration Act, commonly known
as "Motor Voter," that President Bill Clinton signed into law in 1993.
It required all states to offer voter registration to anyone getting a
driver's license. One simply fills out a form and checks a box stating
he is a citizen; he is then registered and in most states does not have
to show any ID to vote.
But no one checks if the person
registering to vote is indeed a citizen. That greatly concerns New York
election officials, who processed 245,000 voter registrations at DMV
offices last year. "It would be [tough to catch] if someone wanted to. .
.get a number of people registered who aren't citizens and went ahead
and got them drivers' licenses," says Lee Daghlian, spokesman for New
York's Board of Elections. Assemblywoman Ginny Fields, a Long Island
Democrat, warns that the state's "Board of Elections has no voter
police" and that the state probably has upwards of 500,000 illegal
immigrants old enough to drive.
The potential for fraud is not
trivial, as federal privacy laws prevent cross-checking voter
registration rolls with immigration records. Nevertheless, a 1997
Congressional investigation found that "4,023 illegal voters possibly
cast ballots in [a] disputed House election" in California.
After 9/11,
the Justice Department found that eight of the 19 hijackers were
registered to vote.
Under pressure from liberal groups, some
states have even abandoned the requirement that people check a
citizenship box to be put on the voter rolls. Iowa has told local
registrars they should register people even if they leave the
citizenship box blank.
Maryland officials wave illegal immigrants
through the registration process, prompting a Justice Department letter
warning they may be helping people violate federal law.
Gov.
Spitzer is treading perilously close to that. Despite a tactical retreat
this week -- he says he will only give illegal immigrants a license
that isn't valid for airplane travel and entering federal buildings --
Mr. Spitzer has taken active steps to obliterate any distinctions
between licenses given to citizens and non-citizens.
In a memo
last Sept. 24, he ordered county clerks to remove the visa expiration
date and "temporary visitor" stamp on licenses issued to non-citizens
who are legally in the country. A Spitzer spokeswoman explained the
change was made because the "temporary" label was "pejorative," given
that some visitors might eventually stay in the U.S. Under fire, Mr.
Spitzer backed down this week, delaying the cancellation of the
"temporary visitor" stamps through the end of next year.
But he
has not retreated from another new bizarre policy. It used to be that
county clerks who process driver's licenses were banned from giving out
voter registration forms to anyone without a Social Security number. No
longer. Lou Dobbs of CNN reported that an Oct. 19 memo from the state
DMV informed the clerks they don't "have any statutory discretion to
withhold a motor voter form."
What's more, the computer block preventing
a DMV clerk from transmitting a motor voter registration without a
Social Security number was removed.
Gov. Spitzer's office told me
the courts have upheld their position on Social Security numbers. Sandy
DePerno, the Democratic clerk of Oneida County, says that makes no
sense. "This makes voter fraud easier," she told me.
While states
such as New York are increasing the risk of such fraud, a half-dozen
states have recently adopted laws requiring voters to offer proof of
identity or citizenship before casting a ballot. A federal commission,
co-chaired by former President Jimmy Carter and former Secretary of
State James Baker, gave such laws a big boost in 2005 when it called for
a nationwide policy requiring a photo ID before voting.
Mr.
Carter has personal knowledge of why such laws are needed. He recounts
in his book "Turning Point" how his 1962 race for Georgia State Senate
involved a local sheriff who had cast votes for the dead. It took a
recount and court challenge before Mr. Carter was declared the winner.
Measures
that curb voter fraud on the one hand and encourage it on the other
will be central to the 2008 election. The Supreme Court will rule on the
constitutionality of Indiana's photo ID law next spring, while lawsuits
challenging Gov. Spitzer's moves will be in New York state courts.
Despite
her muddled comments this week, there's no doubt where Mrs. Clinton
stands on ballot integrity. She opposes photo ID laws, even though they
enjoy over 80% support in the polls. She has also introduced a bill to
force every state to offer no-excuse absentee voting as well as Election
Day registration -- easy avenues for election chicanery. The bill
requires that every state restore voting rights to all criminals who
have completed their prison terms, parole or probation.
Pollster
Scott Rasmussen notes that Mrs. Clinton is such a polarizing figure that
she attracts between 46% and 49% support no matter which Republican
candidate she's pitted against -- even libertarian Ron Paul. She knows
she may have trouble winning next year. Maybe that's why she's thrown
herself in with those who will look the other way as a new electoral
majority is formed -- even if that includes non-citizens, felons and
those who suddenly cross a state line on Election Day and decide they
want to vote someplace new."
...............
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