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GABEO Opposes Voter ID Legislation -- Reduction of ID from 17 to 6

Posted on Apr 22, 2005

Voter ID Law
Turning Back the Clock on Voting Rights
By: Rep. Tyrone Brooks, President
Georgia Association of Black Elected Officials

Our Reasons for Opposition to Senate Bill 84 and House Bill 244 (Voter ID Bills), and other proposals throughout the United States that are venturing down this regressive path.

• Currently Georgia allows the following 17 forms of ID developed in conjunction with the U. S. Justice Department, and allows a voter to cast a provisional ballot if they have none of those on election day. The presumption is currently in favor of voting, with vote fraud prevention coming on the back end by way of checking voters’ signatures.

(1) a valid Georgia driver's license;
(2) a valid identification card issued by a branch, department, agency, or entity of the State of Georgia, any other state, or the United States authorized by law to issue personal identification;
(3) a valid United States passport;
(4) a valid employee identification card containing a photograph of the elector and issued by any branch, department, agency, or entity of the United States government, this state, or any county, municipality, board, authority, or other entity of this state;
(5) a valid employee identification card containing a photograph of the elector and issued by any employer of the elector in the ordinary course of such employer's business;
(6) a valid student identification card containing a photograph of the elector from any public or private college, university, or postgraduate technical or professional school located within the state of Georgia;
(7) a valid Georgia license to carry a pistol or revolver;
(8) a valid pilot's license issued by the Federal Aviation Administration or other authorized agency of the United States;
(9) a valid United States military identification card;
(10) a certified copy of the elector's birth certificate;
(11) a valid social security card;
(12) certified naturalization documentation;
(13) or a certified copy of court records showing adoption, name, or sex change;
(14) A copy of a utility bill;
(15) A bank statement (will be kept confidential);
(16) A government check or payment with name and address; or
(17) A government document that shows the name and address of the elector.

• Senate Bill 84 reduces required ID from 17 to four:
A Valid Georgia Driver’s License
A Valid Georgia ID Card
A Valid Georgia Employment ID Card
A Valid Military ID Card
A Valid United States Passport
A Valid Tribal ID Card

If citizens do not have any one of these four forms of ID, they will not be allowed to vote.

• Georgia has 159 counties, currently there are not more than 50 locations in this state which offer official state ID. This creates a problem of accessibility for senior citizens and many of the state’s poor who depend on public transportation to reach the locations. In many counties in South Georgia there are no locations where Georgia photo IDs are issued.
There is no provision in the legislation to open more locations accessible to each
community.

• When people finally find a location to get a state ID, the state is not going to just take their word for who they are. This constitutes people having to get other ID (most likely a birth certificate) to take with them. If they do not have a birth certificate in their possession they have to go through the inconvenience of getting one from vital statistics which may not be in their area.

• Authors of the Voter ID Bill could not give one instance of voter fraud in the state when
asked while presenting the bill. It is well known that most voter fraud emanates from absentee ballots. The current Republican majority have expanded the provisions regarding those.

• The state will accept IDs from students in public (state colleges and universities), but valid IDs from students at private colleges and universities will not be accepted. College photo ID is college photo ID – whether from a public or private college. To accept one and not the other constitutes a form of discrimination.

• Valid employee photo ID is not acceptable.

• Not many poor and elderly people possess a passport. Driver’s licenses of many elderly
citizens have been taken away from them by their children to keep them from driving, but they still want and have a right to vote.

• Under this bill, voting is being treated as a privilege, but it is a right. We should not be
passing legislation that will present impediments to voting. Voting should be encouraged.

• Under this new legislation provisional ballots are restricted.

• It seems as if the authors of this legislation were reaching for every pre-1965 impediment except the literacy test.

• This is probably one of the most regressive pieces of voter rights legislation since the Jim Crow era. It is definitely currently the country’s most restrictive voter ID bill. I fear that this proposal and the struggle to renew and authorize the Voting Rights Act may just be the beginning of the 2nd Reconstruction.

• GABEO, ACLU, NAACP, SCLC, Rainbow/PUSH, GCPA and many other organizations will file objections with the United States Department of Justice and litigation in the federal court to stop this measure from being enacted into law.

What’s so amazingly frightening about these attacks on our voting rights and access to the ballot is that so many in this country seem to have forgotten or just plainly refuse to acknowledge that we’ve (African-Americans) only been able to cast ballots (free of intimidation and harassment) for 40 years. And some people seem to think we have “reached parity or arrived.” Remember African-Americans comprise 30 percent of Georgia’s population, but we are only six percent of elected officials (including judges) and less than two percent nationally. But African-Americans are over 70 percent of the inmates in jails and prisons.

If we continue the struggle, we will overcome.

Tyrone Brooks, President
Georgia Association of Black Elected Officials
www.gabeo.org









Questions or Comments? Mowens@legis.state.ga.us