(WATCH) On-Demand Video of MN Voter ID Debate
See a supporter and opponent go head to head on whether the Minnesota Constitution should require voters to show photo identification at the polling place.
Watch archived video of the two sides of the Minnesota voter ID ballot question clash for 90 minutes in an Oct. 4, 2012 debate sponsored by Debate Minnesota, brought to you by The UpTake.
Debating for proponents of the proposed amendment: Dan McGrath, executive director at Minnesota Majority.
Representing opponents: Doran Schrantz, executive director of ISAIAH, on behalf of Our Vote Our Future.
The moderater was St. Paul Pioneer Press reporter Bill Salisbury. The debate was held at Founders Hall, Metropolitan State University, 700 E. Seventh St., St. Paul.
The ballot question is: "Shall the Minnesota Constitution be amended to require all voters to present valid photo identification to vote and to require the state to provide free identification to eleigible voters, effective July1, 2013?"
Daryl Fryxell
10:49 am on Thursday, October 4, 2012
You need a photo ID to attend the Democrat National Convention. Yet Democrats believe that it is racist and discriminatory to require a photo ID to vote.
I would like some liberal to honestly explain exactly which eligible voters will be barred from voting with a photo ID requirement. Look at it logically. It can't be old people on Social Security because they had to have ID to receive SS benefits. It can't be anyone on welfare, food stamps, Medicaid, or government disability because you must have an ID to apply for those programs. It can't be anyone that has a bank account or cashes checks because an ID is required for those. It can't be anyone that uses a credit card, rents a car, or flies in an airplane because an ID is required for those things.
Exactly who does that leave out? Illegal aliens and a few criminals. Those are the people that the DFL is protecting. Those are the people the DFL wants to make sure can vote.
Diggitt McLaughlin
4:48 pm on Thursday, October 4, 2012
I lost all my ID just before Memorial Day. It was 10 weeks before I received my new drivers license. I had changed my name since receiving my current passport, and thus could not use it to get a replacement SS card or medical insurance card. All those things had to wait for the drivers license. In other words, if I had lost my DL over Labor Day, I would not have it in time for voting in early November. This is fair why?
Matt Behning
9:18 pm on Saturday, October 6, 2012
You can vote provissional and your ballot is held, once you come back with your ID (time limit not determined yet, usually several days) your vote will then be counted. If you cannot afford an ID, one can be provided for free.... watch the debate... he explains all these questions or go to www.protectmyvote.com if you have any doubts or questions:)
Russ Wickstrom
2:47 pm on Thursday, October 4, 2012
Don't forget the DEAD, Daryl...
Daryl Fryxell
3:24 pm on Thursday, October 4, 2012
Russ, I figured that was a given, but it was probably inconsiderate to leave them out. LOL
Matt Behning
9:47 pm on Saturday, October 6, 2012
If you watch the debate, Dan pointed out that 10,000 dead are still on the voter registration lol!
Fuller Malarkey
2:59 pm on Thursday, October 4, 2012
The problem appears to be with felons registering to vote / voting. Address the problem through the criminal justice system. It would cost a fraction of the expense to link the correction department's information on ineligible voters with the Secretary of State's registration list.
I'm not interested in paying out any money to catch Big Foot voting, or disfranchising one citizen to address a problem that has no evidence exists.
Matt Behning
9:22 pm on Saturday, October 6, 2012
Really? MN leads the country in Voter fraud conviction since 1936; in the 08 election alone there was 200 convictions; 6,000 ballots in the 2010 election were found to not match up with the voter's they said they were. Judging by the Democrat's fierce oposition to the amendment, I'm sure the voter fraud is much worse than the crappy excuse for voter laws that we have in place now.
Mary McCoy
4:57 pm on Thursday, October 4, 2012
Daryl I could not have put it any better than you did. Thank you for your words.
Diggitt, I would hope that with your passport, which has a photo inside, and a certified copy of your marriage licence or name change that would have surficed.
Melissa
10:20 pm on Thursday, October 4, 2012
It would be nice if people would stop assuming that all Democrats believe this and all Republicans believe that. Nowdays you are either right or left with nothing in between. I vote Democrat 90% of the time and I think that an ID should be required to vote, its just common sense. Not all Democrats are voting they way you think.
Daryl Fryxell
7:36 am on Friday, October 5, 2012
Good for you, Melissa, but you have to admit that the DFL leaders are quite solidly against voter ID. I wish they would use common sense like you do.
David
12:33 am on Saturday, October 6, 2012
Melissa is one of the 61% of Democrats (according to the Strib poll) who support Voter ID inspite of their party's objections. She is in teh majority, but her own party wants to silence her and pretend she doesn't exist.
Good point about not all DFLers believe the party line, Melissa. This issue is truly 'bipartisan' as the left continually demands everything the right proposes be if it's to be considered 'legitimate.'
Thanks for voting with common sense, Melissa, instead of blind partisanship like your DFL leadership expecs you to do.
Dave Haas
1:44 pm on Friday, October 5, 2012
Bill should have been the moderator at the presidential debate.
I've actually seen voters turned away because they had already "voted" - they showed id, proved who they were, etc... but were not allowed to vote because they already had. They could not even fill out a provisional ballot because as the poll worker put it - we don't have any way of knowing which ballot was cast incorrectly.
Pat Shane
2:52 pm on Friday, October 5, 2012
There is nothing wrong with requiring an ID to vote.
HOWEVER
There IS something wrong with implementing this new law 9 months before a presidential election. If voter fraud was so rampant in the last election, why didn't the GOP rush to pass this law immediately after the 2008 election? Wait until the 2016 election to impose this, that way it will give people 4 years to get their act together, and THEN you can give them the 'you have no excuse' treatment.
Watch the video and sign the petition to end Voter Suppression.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9TjVsQa57c
Dave Haas
5:25 pm on Friday, October 5, 2012
Pat -
They passed a "Proposed Amendment" to the Minnesota Constitution - Not a law. The amendment is being voted on by us on Nov 6. If it passes, it will be added to the constitution and implemented in time for the next election cycle in 2013, 2014, etc... Not retroactively for this cycle.
Had they attempted to pass a "Law" 9 months before the Presidential election, Governor Dayton most certainly would have vetoed it - and it would have failed, since no DFLer would have crossed the aisle publicly on this one.
David
12:44 am on Saturday, October 6, 2012
Actually, the GOP DID try to pass a law last summer, but Dayton vetoed it. And the GOP couldn't pass the law after the 2008 election because the DFL controlled the house and nothing would have passed. Despite overwhelming support by GOPers and independents and even 61% of DFLers supporting it (like Right to Work legislation) the DFL reps and senators voted as their special interests wanted, not their constituents.
That law would have provided for a provisional ballot for those who can't produce ID at the poll. They then have 10 days to prove citizenship/residency. MN is one of only 7 states that DOES NOT have a provisonal ballot, but lets you vouche for 15 strangers that they are eligible to vote. How ridiculous is that?
And voter ID is NOT voter Suppression as the Supreme Court ruled in 2008 in the Indiana law. Neither is it a poll tax nor does it disenfranchise anyone who is an eligible voter. In fact, the U of Missouri did a case study on IN after passage and found just the opposite. So you can claim it's Suppression, but SCOTUS has already ruled that it's not. And that was with JP Stevens writing the majority opinion.
Supreme Court upholds Voter ID law
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/29/washington/28cnd-scotus.html?_r=0
Mizzou study debunking opponents' claims against Voter ID
http://munews.missouri.edu/news-releases/2008/0102-voter-id.php
John Anderson
5:06 pm on Friday, October 5, 2012
@Pat, a couple things.
1. The Republicans did not have the majority in 2008 and would not have been able to pass this law with the DFL so set against protecting illegal votes.
2. The "law" is not law yet. It was forwarded to the ballot and if it passes it will be placed in our Constitution. You will not have to show your ID on November 6, 2012. So you'll be able to vouch for 15 people on election day one more time.
I hope you understand the situation better now.
Matt Behning
9:32 pm on Saturday, October 6, 2012
Actually the Bill passed with bi-partisan support in 2009 and Govenor Dayton veto'd it... that's why it's on the ballot as a constitutional ammendment.
Matt Behning
9:30 pm on Saturday, October 6, 2012
MN leads the country in Voter fraud conviction since 1936; in the 08 election alone there was 200 convictions; Canada, Mexico, nearly every other country in the world has voter ID; would you want your liqour store run like the polling place?
It's like Dan said at the end of the debate.... Stealing a car is a felony, voter fraud is a felony... you don't leave your car doors unlocked, keys in the ignition, and a note on the window that says "it's a felony to steal this car." Yet that's what we do at the polling booths now.
Al Anderson
2:48 am on Friday, October 12, 2012
Democrats doing what they do best -- cheat and be ok with doing so
http://www.shtfplan.com/headline-news/caught-on-tape-obama-campaign-staffers-say-its-okay-to-vote-twice_10102012
Steve4
1:21 pm on Monday, October 15, 2012
The only thing this convinced me of about voter ID is that we should eliminate vouching.
Steve4
1:39 pm on Monday, October 15, 2012
His best points were that this is a real issue, Voter ID is not voter suppression, and it has worked out in other states. He was disingenuous about the technical problems that remain, the size of the problem, and the true cost to implement.
She admitted that what she says is speculation, but I agree that it is our responsibility to speculate when passing a law.
Based on what both of them are saying, I think 1. Voter fraud is an issue, but it's not a crisis as Republicans make it out to be. This is something we should work on. 2. Voter ID law is not as disenfranchising as Democrats make it out to be. 3. Implementing Voter ID may or may not be expensive, however the burden will fall on local governments, many of which are already stressed. 4. Implementing this will be legally complicated, but not as complicated as Democrats suggest, but not as simple as Republicans suggest. 5. Adjustments cannot easily be made to the amendment as we get feedback on our process. My conclusion is that the existing system needs some reform and the Voter ID system accomplishes some of this reform while creating new technical issues and financial burdens. Furthermore, it, itself cannot be reformed. We need reform but this is not the right one.
Steve4
1:39 pm on Monday, October 15, 2012
"if it isn't in the writing, then it's not going to happen." Wouldn't it be awesome if that was true for every piece of law that gets written?
Steve4
1:43 pm on Monday, October 15, 2012
They talk a lot about whether or not we can establish eligibility to vote in different scenarios. Do you feel like this is resolved one way or the other? Does it matter?