Sunday, November 2, 2008

A Good Idea

Comes from Loyola Law Professor and "Election Law Blog" poster Richard Hasen:

The solution is to take the job of voter registration for federal elections out of the hands of third parties (and out of the hands of the counties and states) and give it to the federal government. The Constitution grants Congress wide authority over congressional elections. The next president should propose legislation to have the Census Bureau, when it conducts the 2010 census, also register all eligible voters who wish to be registered for future federal elections. High-school seniors could be signed up as well so that they would be registered to vote on their 18th birthday. When people submit change-of-address cards to the post office, election officials would also change their registration information.

This change would eliminate most voter registration fraud. Government employees would not have an incentive to pad registration lists with additional people in order to keep their jobs. The system would also eliminate the need for matches between state databases, a problem that has proved so troublesome because of the bad quality of the data. The federal government could assign each person a unique voter-identification number, which would remain the same regardless of where the voter moves. The unique ID would prevent people from voting in two jurisdictions, such as snowbirds who might be tempted to vote in Florida and New York. States would not have to use the system for their state and local elections, but most would choose to do so because of the cost savings.
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I am tired of hearing Republicans claim "registration fraud," and bitching about ACORN (actually a victim in all this). I really don't like having to hear about voter suppression and intimidation from Dems either. If you're worried about the feds being too involved in our lives, lets swap out "No Child Left Behind," which is a failure, and put the $$ into the Census Bureau, where it could do good.

1 comment:

Genie Siedler said...

Protection of the vote is essential.