South Carolina Senator/Voter ID Opponent Resigns for Campaign Cash for Sex Toy Spree

Senator Robert Ford has resigned.  Ford was one of the leading opponents against the South Carolina Voter ID law.  Ford resigned today amid allegations that he used campaign cash to buy sex toys, and more.



Also, Ford is accused of using campaign cash to buy penis enlargement pills.  Fits News:

The most bizarre allegation of all? That Ford used his campaign debit card to purchase Cyvita – penis enlargement pills that have yet to be approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Tom Perez: Obama’s Man at the White House

Third ranked visitor overall: “The Daily Caller study of the White House visitor logs demonstrates that Perez was the third overall most frequent visitor to the White House, just behind Deputy Commerce Secretary Rebecca Blank. Perez visited the White House 83 times during a period in which he overrode the recommendations of career Justice Department lawyers to preclear South Carolina voter ID under the Voting Rights Act and blocked Texas Voter ID.


During the same period, Perez allowed the nation’s voter rolls to become bloated with millions of dead voters by refusing to bring any cases under Section 8 of the Motor Voter law.”

“Wisconsin’s voter ID law constitutional, appeals court rules”

A Wisconsin
appeals court on Thursday ruled the state’s controversial voter ID law
is constitutional, a victory for supporters who say the measure limits
fraud at the ballot box.
 

The Fourth District Court of
Appeals overturned a March 2012 decision by Dane County judge Richard
Niess, who ruled in favor of the League of Women Voters of Wisconsin,
which claimed that the law is too burdensome, denying potential voters
the right to vote.

Reuters

Wyoming fails to even make effort on voter ID but finds plenty of energy to raise gas taxes

The Star-Tribune reports: A group of lawmakers tasked with studying and potentially proposing a
bill to require Wyoming voters to show identification at polling places
decided not to pursue the matter Tuesday.  …Committee co-chairwoman Rep. Rosie Berger, R-Sheridan, said there
wouldn’t be enough time to research and craft a bill to address the
issues.

Wyoming legislators, including the legislative leadership of the Wyoming Republican Party, would have you believe they simply did not have the time to research or draft voter ID legislative language. However, the lawmakers certainly had the time to raise the fuels tax by .10 cents a gallon and create a new lottery system, multiple ways to raise revenue and spend citizens money.  With all the new revenue, perhaps the overworked legislators will now be able to hire additional interns to assist with the strenuous research.

To give Rep. Rosie Berger, now the House-Speaker Pro Tempore, some encouragement on setting priorities or simply your recommendations on energy drinks, she can be contacted here.