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At a Jan. 28 press conference in Columbia, Rep. Jim Clyburn described dramatic improvements needed in the election process, and told how a new bill, the Voter Empowerment Act of 2013, would provide those enhancements if passed.

A co-sponsor of the bill, Clyburn said its goals are to improve voter accessibility and the integrity and accountability of the election system.

Included in its provisions are requirements that electronic voting machines produce paper receipts, allowance of voter registration on election days, improved poll access for disabled voters, and creation of a national voter hotline.

The Act also calls for criminalization of voter intimidation practices and illegalization of deceptive tactics that intentionally mislead voters about their rights.

This national address to voting rights stems from consistent changes to states’ election laws in the last four years that appear polarized, Clyburn said. 

“They’re aimed very directly at voting patterns favored by minority voters,” Clyburn told The State

For example, a purging of voter registration records following the 2008 election cycles resulted in a five-percent drop of Hispanic voters nationwide, and seven percent of African-American voters were removed from the rosters.

Restrictions on voters’ rights took a dramatic surge in the last two years in particular.

Since 2011, 41 states including South Carolina introduced 180 bills that would restrict voting rights, such as by voter ID requirements, limited registration, and reduction in early voting periods. In less than two years, 25 of the 180 proposals as well as two executive orders were passed in 19 states.

These 19 states account for 231 electoral votes in presidential elections – 86 percent of the number needed to win.

Other vote-compromising efforts were done directly by state election and voter registration offices, as well.

The eight declared “battleground states” of the 2012 presidential race, for example – Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina and Pennsylvania – had collectively dropped over half a million registered voters from their records since 2008.

In response to these potentially-polarized actions, Clyburn’s Voter Empowerment Act also requires that election officials be demonstrably non-partisan, as well, and not be allowed to play any role in political campaigns.

In 2011, South Carolina state legislature passed law requiring citizens to present state-issued photo identification in order to vote, affecting over a quarter-million registered voters in the state.

Following a challenge from the U.S. Dept. of Justice in federal court, the Voter ID law remains valid, but now accepts other identification, and also allows provisional ballots to voters with “reasonable impediment” to producing such ID at the polls.

Other bills calling for restrictions in early voting and accommodations to disabled voters were introduced to South Carolina’s legislature this month, as well.  

A similar national Voter Empowerment Act was introduced last year. Referred to a House committee in May 2012, it was never brought to vote. 


 
 
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You can also use the direct site where you can select and even explain the reasons behind your choices.  To participate, you'll have to select "register to vote" e top-row menu (that's register to vote on the site, not actual voter registration, please note). 

Sponsored by League of Young Voters, New Era Colorado, Forward Montana, and the Bus Project, TheBallot.org lets you comment on the candidates, and even add smaller local races to its records, too. 
 
 
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Today a federal court upheld South Carolina’s contested “Voter ID” law, but said it can’t be enforced in this year’s elections.

“(G)iven the short time left before the 2012 election, and given the numerous steps necessary to properly implement the law…we do not grant pre-clearance for the 2012 elections,” Judge Brett Cavanaugh wrote in the ruling.

In November, voters can still use their voter registration cards and other non-state IDs in order to participate in the general election.

This allows the 239,000 affected voters in the state to cast ballots this year, but not in future elections unless they acquire an approved photo identification.

State legislature passed the law in May 2011, but the U.S. Dept. of Justice ruled against it later that year, stating the “Voter ID” requirement was restrictive and also discriminatory in application.

Using claims of votes cast in the names of deceased citizens, state Attorney Gen. Alan Wilson pursued the case, which wound up in D.C.’s U.S. District Court.

Response to the court’s ruling has been mixed. Republican officials who helped enter and pass the law in state legislature offer an expected praise for the decision, which Wilson calls “a major victory.”

The version approved by the three-judge panel is not the same as the original state law, however, as attorney J. Gerald Hebert, who represented those opposed to Voter ID, points out.

“Ultimately the law that the court has approved for 2013 and beyond is a huge departure from the bill enacted by the South Carolina Legislature,” Hebert said.

The original bill required voters to provide government-issued photo ID in order to cast ballots.

In the variation offered during the case by Wilson, voters without identification will still be allowed to vote after simply signing a form explaining why they do not have any of the five approved IDs at the time.

Without this accommodation, the court would not have ruled in favor of Voter ID, Judge Cavanaugh stated.

Many others aren’t satisfied with the variation, however, calling today’s court decision only a temporary victory that will expire next year.

“We’re glad that thousands of voters who faced being denied access to the polls will get to vote next month, but are concerned about what lies ahead,” said Nancy Abudu, an attorney with the ACLU.

Over 239,000 South Carolinians are registered to vote, but lack any of the required formats of photo ID.

Bobbie Rose, Democratic candidate for the 1st Congressional Dist., is also dissatisfied with the decision.

“While I’m glad the ruling won’t affect voters this year, it’s still deeply disturbing how much of an obstacle this creates for South Carolina voters in the future, especially seniors,” Rose says.

“Once you’re 65, you don’t need to renew a license after it expires unless you’re still driving. Banks and even courts still have to accept those IDs, too. Those seniors must now have their IDs renewed, though, and will even face costs of acquiring the documentation needed to prove their identity. That’s the equivalent of a poll tax.”

Rose says the law will disproportionately affect minorities, and will also affect young voters, too. “Less than two-thirds of 18-year-olds have a license,” Rose says, “and their student IDs won’t be acceptable when they want to vote or register to vote.”

The state Democratic Party “strongly disagrees with the court’s opinion,” as well, even alluding that today’s decision might not be final.

SCDP “is hopeful that the United States Supreme Court will resolve the differences between various Voter ID cases around the country,” party chair Dick Harpootlian said this afternoon.


 
 
No online or same-day voter registration. Silly voter ID requirements about to be enacted, and no convenience voting formats. No preparation for new young voters, either.

And where does that leave us? Tied with Virginia for dead last when it comes to meeting the needs of the electing public.
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To read the full report by Rock The Vote, click here.

(To see a somewhat larger version of the chart, click here.)