This sort of bad behavior at the polls is more common in Mississippi than you might realize, and a state grand jury indicted Kimberly Readus on state charges. I’m sure the Eric “My People” Holder Voting Section will be hot on the trial with a Section 11(b) investigation.
Author Archives: J Christian Adams
“Republican campaign for Va. attorney general raises new questions about Fairfax ballots”
Wash Post.
“Mississippi Trying to Educate People about Voter ID Law”
Mississippi’s top elections official is starting to run TV ads explaining the state’s voter identification law. There are two 30-second commercials, one that started airing Monday and another that starts in January. Link.
Supreme Court ruling: “Inconvenience in obtaining photo ID no more significant than the usual burdens of voting”
In a recent legal document, the State of Texas quotes the Supreme Court ruling in the Crawford case on the nationwide legality of requiring a photo ID in voting. A 6-3 majority in Crawford case upheld the overall constitutionality of the Indiana photo ID law and the majority stated that the possible slight inconvenience to get a photo ID at an election office or drivers license office was no more significant or burdensome than the usual burdens of registration and voting.
Mississippi voter ID campaign includes commercials and outreach to political parties, civic clubs, religious organizations, and county officials
This Jackson Free Press reports the first test of the photo ID law will be in the GOP primary. The campaign includes commercials and outreach to political parties and other civic and local government groups.
Of the voter ID awareness campaign, Hosemann told reporters Monday that his office is airing two 30-second TV commercials—one that started Monday and one that starts in January. Hosemann said he and his staff also are speaking to political parties, civic clubs, religious organizations, city and county elected officials, and other groups that are in touch with local communities. He said he’s asking them to help share information about the new law and to help find people who lack an acceptable form of photo ID.“We are going to take great pains to reach everyone,” Hosemann said Monday during a news conference at the Capitol.
Texas: “Prominent veterans of the Executive Branch have endorsed photo ID laws”
In responding to DOJ allegations that the passage of photo ID laws must have been done with intent to discriminate against minorities, Texas points out in legal documents that Executive Branch veterans (former President Jimmy Carter and former Secretary of State James Baker III) jointly endorsed photo ID in its recommendations in its report “Building Confident in U.S. Elections” as a way to improve elections in the United States.
Texas: Opponents of Photo ID law make non-factual claim that “voter ID will cause long lines and burden all voters”
In its Motion to Dismiss the lawsuit against the ID law, the State Texas notes a number of times that the opponents to photo ID law are now making the accusation that the law will cause long lines and burden all voters. The exaggeration and hyperbole of such claims reveals the weakness of the lawsuit against the new law. There is simply no evidence to support this baseless claim. See the legal document here.