Blacks are wary of effect of Indiana voter ID bill [more]
Indiana would have the strictest voter
identification laws in the nation under a bill approved Monday by the
House after three hours of bitter partisan debate. "This is definitely
bloody Monday," said Rep. Greg Porter, D-Indianapolis. Senate Bill 483
would require voters to show a photo ID issued by either Indiana state
government or the federal government before they can cast their
ballots. Expired IDs would be accepted if they had expired after the
most recent general election. Rep. Tim Brown, the Crawfordsville
Republican who sponsored the measure, said it is needed to instill
voter confidence. But 18 House Democrats went to the microphone to
charge that the bill will take away the right of some people to vote at
all. Several accused Republicans of taking part in a nationwide GOP
effort to suppress the votes of minorities. In the end, the bill passed 52-45, with
every Republican voting for it and every Democrat present voting
against it. The measure previously passed the Senate. If the Senate
goes along with changes made by the House, it will go to Gov. Mitch
Daniels. While a handful of other states have or are implementing laws to
require photo IDs, only Indiana does not allow voters to sign
affidavits attesting to their identities if they do not have the
required ID. Under the bill, a voter without the ID would be able to
cast a provisional ballot, but it would not be counted unless the voter
showed the ID at the county clerk's office within six days or signed a
statement expressing religious objections to a photograph. "I wonder if D.C.
Stephenson's ghost is lurking around here somewhere," Rep. Mae
Dickinson, D-Indianapolis, said, referring to the KKK Grand Dragon who
was powerful in Indiana in the 1920s. [more]
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