Mo. House panel backs do-over attempt on voter ID
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
By DAVID A. LIEB
Associated Press
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Dealt a setback in court, a Missouri House committee acted quickly Tuesday to embrace new wording for a 2012 ballot measure that would allow a photo identification mandate to be imposed upon voters in future elections.
The measure approved by the House Elections Committee seeks to rewrite the ballot summary voters would see when deciding later this year whether to amend the Missouri Constitution to allow a state law requiring voters to show government-issued photo identification at the polls.
As originally passed by lawmakers last year, the ballot summary referred to the measure as the “Voter Protection Act.”
Cole County Circuit Judge Pat Joyce struck down that summary last week, taking particular issue with the fact that the phrase “Voter Protection Act” never appears in the actual text of the proposed constitutional amendment. The judge’s written decision also noted that regardless of the proposed constitutional amendment, the Legislature already has authority to enact an early voting period, and the ballot proposal would place restrictions on that.
Joyce said she struck down the ballot summary to provide lawmakers an opportunity to revise it.
The revision approved by the House panel would drop any reference to the “Voter Protection Act” from the ballot summary. Instead, the summary would state: “Shall the Missouri Constitution be amended to create standards for enacting general laws that authorize advance voting, require the use of government-issued photo identification in order to vote, and govern voting procedures based on whether an individual is voting in person or by absentee ballot.”
The revised summary still must be approved by the full House and Senate.
Some opponents of a photo identification requirement questioned Tuesday whether the revised summary was good enough.
Ron Berry, a legislative liaison for Secretary of State Robin Carnahan, told lawmakers there was no precedent for them to use a “House concurrent resolution” — which typically lacks the effect of law — to change the wording of a proposed constitutional amendment passed in a previous year.
Denise Lieberman, an attorney with the Advancement Project voting rights group that challenged the original ballot summary, said she would continue to fight the measure in court unless lawmakers adopt a summary indicating the measure would strip away some of the voting rights currently provided by the Missouri Constitution.
Lawmakers are pursuing a proposed constitutional amendment specifically allowing a photo identification requirement because the state Supreme Court struck down a 2006 law that would have mandated photo ID for voters. The court said that law infringed upon on the fundamental right to vote contained in the state constitution.
St. Louis attorney Burt Newman, who challenged the 2006 law, testified to the House committee Tuesday that he believes the latest measure still contains constitutional flaws and thus is a waste of taxpayer time and money.
“We have reached a point where this is turning into a legislative fiasco,” Newman said. “How many times do you need to be told ‘no’ by legal authorities before it is recognized that in this state photo ID legislation is not going to become law?”
Newman’s wife, Rep. Stacey Newman, joined the other two Democrats on the committee in voting against the revised ballot summary. All the Republicans on the committee supported the measure.
Committee Chairman Rep. Tony Dugger, R-Hartville, said his panel heard testimony and voted on the bill on the same day because there is an urgency to act before the session ends May 18.
“The issue cannot be placed on the November ballot until we get it fixed,” Dugger said. So “we need to move forward with it as quickly as we can.”
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Voter ID measure is HCR53.
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Online:
House: http://www.house.mo.gov

Comments
gofish 1 year, 1 month ago
I have a family member living in institutional care that has physical disabilities that makes getting a new photo ID an EXTREME hardship, if not near impossible. Yet her mind is perfectly capable. The Republicans do not want her to vote in the next election. Unless they propose to bring the opportunity to obtain a state ID to the place where she lives she may not get to vote. This discriminatory legislation is something that should be STOPPED! A person needs to have equal accessibility to obtain a voter ID if you want to stop them from voting without it. Otherwise, Republicans are merely trying to stack the votes in favor of the wealthy and non-disabled, just as the lawsuit says. Good job Judge Joyce. Republicans, what are you so afraid of? Equal Rights? Equal protection under the law?
tonto_goldberg 1 year, 1 month ago
What they are afraid of is the possibility of more democrat votes.
spelchek 1 year, 1 month ago
Nope. Just the dead democrat votes.
spelchek 1 year, 1 month ago
"...if not near impossible. " -- If "near impossible" to get an ID, would it not be fair to say that making it to a voting booth would be "near impossible"? Thus making your argument moot?
Sequoia 1 year, 1 month ago
You don't have to go to polling place to vote. People can vote by mail. Thus making YOUR argument moot.
asb 1 year, 1 month ago
Republicans vote by mail. The military vote by mail. Absentee vote fraud is virtually unknown. Leftists, as you so lovingly call anybody left of yourself (a very very big club), invented voting, forced fairness on establishment voting practices, and win more elections than conservatives worldwide and in the US over the long haul. So, every statement you just made, in an effort to make non-Gracefuls look evil, is wrong. Your credibility cannot take much more of this, you risk becoming a running gag in a sit-com, like Bazinga!. Conservative perspectives, trends and values are critical to a stable political system Grace. Without reason and true expression, conservatism becomes fearful and narrow, and you get Rush Limbaugh instead of George Will, Ann Coulter instead of William Buckly. Is Mitt going to be the GOP nominee because of Americans' weakness and gulibility? Or has the narrow fearful intolerant far Right simply worn them out and they'll support a reasoned Romney over Santorum/Palin/Limbaugh to beat Obama. We need extremes to easily define the reasoned left/right middle ground, so you'll always have that value, but sheesh, wouldn't you rather be listened to than just heard?
tonto_goldberg 1 year, 1 month ago
Absentee vote fraud is about as common as in-person vote fraud. Please research the Florida 2000 vote issues, where the strongest push was made for absentee votes to be counted without requiring any verification of eligibility.
spelchek 1 year, 1 month ago
You are correct. Very easy for a care giver to fill the dots in on an absentee ballot (on top of their vote).
spelchek 1 year, 1 month ago
They said "near impossible" not "impossible". It's near impossible for me to get out of bed in the morning; but I do it.
RobHunterJohnson 1 year, 1 month ago
No one has explained where this bus load of folks that go out and vote when needed happend? Please explain this to me, I have been waiting since the last article! Rob
RobHunterJohnson 1 year, 1 month ago
Liberti? Rob
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