Expect more reports like this: “Florence County’s top election official said the county’s first test of South Carolina’s new voter ID law went off without a hitch.”
“We Already Have an Election Commission—And Obama Has Ignored It”
The Foundry:
“And in fact, we already have a federal bipartisan election commission. The U.S. Election Assistance Commission was established in 2002 by the Help America Vote Act. It was tasked with recommending “best practices” in election administration to the states. But it is, in essence, a non-functioning agency: The seats of the four commissioners who run the agency have sat empty for a long time (they are supposed to be filled by the President), and the top two career slots, the general counsel and the staff director, also sit empty. So now President Obama wants to establish yet another election commission, bypassing the one we already have that has been idle—due to a lack of staffing that he is largely responsible for.”
Early Voting: Slow, Election Day Voting: Fast
It appears that many of the slowest longest lines to vote in November were at early voting sites. This was especially true in Florida. In the State of the Union speech the President talked about Desaline Victor from Miami. For reasons not in the speech, and not in any press accounts, Ms. Victor waited in a long line for early voting. Lines on election day tended to be much shorter than early voting lines.
It was a confounding choice. Why would voters choose to stand in long lines for early voting when election day lines were quicker and shorter?
One possibility is a lack of information, namely the risk adverse voter assumed that election day lines would be longer than early voting lines. That, of course, wasn’t the case. So insufficient information might explain the choice to stand in a 7 hour line instead of standing in a much shorter one on election day.
But now there is more information – early voting is slow while election day voting tends to be faster.
National Secretaries of State tell the Federal Government to back off the nationalization of elections
In the New Hampshire Union Leader, Secretary of State William Gardner tells the paper he is not happy with “one-size fits all” federal legislation to require mandatory early voting periods based on previous bad experiences with other federal involvement in different parts of the electoral process. He also states that the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS) passed a bipartisan resolution advising against the attempted federalization of state election functions. It sounds like a bipartisan group of state election officials don’t like the nationalization of elections in America and are speaking out against the overreach.
Two weeks ago, Gardner was in Washington,
D.C., for the winter conference of the National Association of
Secretaries of State, where he and other top state election officials
voiced concern about possible federal legislation.A year ago,
the NASS passed a resolution urging Congress to “respect our country’s
legal and historical distinctions in federal and state sovereignty and
avoid pre-emptions of state authority when drafting federal
legislation.”The 2012 resolution also states, “Federal
legislation should not curtail state innovation and authority solely for
the sake of creating uniform methods among the states; all legislation
should grant states maximum flexibility in determining methodologies for
properly and effectively carrying out the duties of secretaries of
state, including the protection of voting rights.”
“State of Confusion” in State of the Union
National Review Online.
“He announced a “nonpartisan commission to improve the voting experience in America.” However, he is not putting election officials who have actual experience in election administration in charge of the commission. Instead, he is putting two campaign attorneys in charge, one from his campaign (former White House counsel Bob Bauer) and another from Governor Romney’s campaign (Ben Ginsburg). That is quite revealing of what Obama considers to be “nonpartisan.”
While there may have been a small number of Americans who had to wait for long periods to vote in 2012, the vast majority did not. A recent study of the 2012 election reported that the average wait time nationally was only 14 minutes. The longest times were in Florida (45 minutes), and one of the shortest was in California (6 minutes). In 2008, when we had the highest turnout in a presidential election since 1960, we had similarly short wait times. The Pew Center released a study in December reporting that “blacks voted at a higher rate this year than other minority groups and for the first time in history may also have voted at a higher rate than whites,” so it is pretty clear that there were no real problems in the 2012 election that kept the President’s base out of the polls. Methinks all the talk of long lines in the last month is designed to justify a federal takeover of elections that would do a lot of other mischief.
Kansas Secretary of State seeks authority to prosecute voter fraud
Why? As Secretary Kobach testified on behalf of SB 63, voter fraud is a real problem but is rarely prosecuted because locals focus on other crime… Kobach also lamented a lack of appetite for handing down serious penalties for voting crimes. He noted that of the 11 double-voting violations his office has referred for prosecution, only two have been adjudicated and those resulted in diversion — essentially a warning that keeps an offender’s criminal record clean. “So, 11 cases, all slam dunks, all should have been convictions,” Kobach said. “But instead we have no convictions, no penalties, no deterrence.” And just like that, actual voter fraud becomes ‘nonexistent.’
St. Mary’s on Ash Wednesday
I will be speaking at St. Mary’s University law school in San Antonio (TX) on Ash Wednesday at noon. Topic: Voting Rights Act, Shelby and Texas Voter ID.
You aren’t a resident if you pay out-of-state tuition
Indiana aims to fix a growing problem - out of state students pretending they live in state. The Indiana legislation make a pretty reasonable assumption – if a student pays out of state tuition, then they aren’t a resident for voting purposes.
Partisan ABA Resolution Undermines Free Association and Speech
The partisan and politicized American Bar Association has passed a resolution designed to undermine private political association and free speech. This is another reason why the ABA attracts only a fraction of all American lawyers to be members.
Georgia Senate Approves Nonpartisan County Elections
“The bills would include elections for sheriff, district attorney, coroner, solicitor general, tax commissioner and clerk of superior court. Not included are races for county commissioner.” Link.