GOP National Voter Suppression (Interstate Crosscheck, ID, Poll Closures, Voter Patrols)

newworldafro

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What do you define as voter suppression? Having people show their ids to prove they are who registered?

Yes. No one should have to get ID to vote.
Do you know how long it takes to get an ID in between Elections??
2 - 4 years!!...:damn:...720 - 1,440 days!! Who has that amount of time or acess to go to their local DMV or Social Security office to get or apply for ID? There is no way people that go to church every Sunday, catch a ride to the grocery store, get to their medical facility every few weeks, live near a bus stop, or use a bank can get an ID in that amount of time..:martin:

It is blatant voter suppression, harkening back to the Jim Crow South of voter literary tests for black people. Asking people for ID to vote to see if they are legal citizens is outright White Supremacy, cause ALL 7 billion people on Earth......and Walking Dead Horde extras.........should be allowed to vote for American elected officials. :ufdup:
 
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the cac mamba

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ive gotta be honest: if you're a person who lives your life every other day of the year without an ID, then something tells me you're one of the 60 million who stay home on election day :skip:

the republicans' motives are blatant, but come on :why:
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Your saying minorities are too stupid to google how to register to vote...shyt I believe FB was linking it this year. I registered years ago and everytime I go vote my name is there I don't recall having to renew and I think I registered in like 2007. Your acting like registering is some Herculean effort or people are too stupid and unmotivated
and yet, we need laws to protect this.

Jackass.
 

Red Shield

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you just said the DMV would be a place to get registered to vote...and you don't even realize how precarious THAT paradigm even is.

You're a fukking waste of life.



People haven't been paying attention to voting locations being closed. the number being cut down from something like 100 to 30 locations. Hours being restricted. etc etc


Folks haven't been paying attention either that or wanna be disingenuous.
 

Eddy Gordo

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I'm still waiting to see proof of this voter fraud. If it was as rampant as they claim evidence of it should be easy to come by.
 

chowism

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Voting is rigged period. Not just this election but most elections. Most nations use violence against enemies or anyone who comes in their path. Why do we citizens actually believe(especially us black folk) they will allow us to vote our way to freedom. If we believe in voting we obviously don't understand how nations maintain power.
 

satam55

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Voter-polls-1-300x199.jpg


Of the 1.5 million Florida residents barred from voting due to a prior felony conviction, almost a quarter are African-American. But, a newly proposed referendum seeking to repeal the state’s felony voting restriction could restore those rights.

After advocates spent a number of years gathering the required 68,314 petition signatures, the Florida Supreme Court on Monday announced that it would consider a proposal allowing a referendum on the the 2018 ballot asking state voters to roll back Florida’s felony voting restriction law, the Intercept reported. The court is expected to review the proposal on March 7.

According to nonpartisan website Ballotpedia, the Florida Voting Rights Restoration for Felons Initiative of 2018 would essentially restore voting rights to individuals with felony convictions upon completion of their sentences. It would not, however, reinstate voting rights to persons convicted of murder or a sexual felony offense.

Desmond Meade, an ex-felon and the chairman of the Floridians for a Fair Democracy, the group spearheading the effort to repeal the state’s felony disenfranchisement statute, has spent years collecting signatures for the ballot initiative and said he’s optimistic about the high court’s decision to consider the group’s proposal.

“To the best of my recollection, never before has a purely grassroots effort gotten as far as triggering a [Florida] Supreme Court review,” Meade said. “This is a major milestone.”

The odds of a favorable ruling by the court are that much higher after the Florida Division of Elections reportedly filed a motion supporting the proposed ballot initiative, Florida’s WMFE news radio station reported.

It’s a known fact that a large majority of the Sunshine State’s disenfranchised voters are Democratic minorities and advocates for the restored voting rights of felons have argued that the disproportion is a civil rights disaster that may very well have impacted the outcome of key elections, like the George W. Bush vs. Al Gore presidential race of 2000.

Those voters also could have affected Trump’s victory in the key swing state in this year’s contentious presidential election. He won Florida by a margin less than a tenth the size of the state’s disenfranchised population, according to The Intercept.

The Florida Supreme Court’s decision to review the group’s proposed referendum is good news, however, the campaign’s next steps include gathering another 600,000 petition signatures – nearly 10 times the initial amount – in order to move forward. Now, Meade is working to quickly expand interest in the pressing issue in order to get enough people on board in time.

“We weren’t getting funding or anything, so it took more time,” Meade said of the campaign. “But we’ll need 10 times as many people now.”

Efforts to restore the voting rights of felons have been successful in other states this past year. In April, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe signed an executive order reinstating the voting rights of millions of felons who had permanently been disenfranchised due to their previous convictions. States like Louisiana, however, are still struggling to make progress, as 700,000 convicted felons barred from voting filed a class-action lawsuit against the state.
 
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