Guns and voter fraud vigilantes
by Tom Sullivan
As early voting gets started here this week, more thoughts about new voting restrictions.
Call a gun rights advocate's AR-15 an assault rifle and he'll think you're a dumbass liberal who a) doesn't know the first thing about weapons, and b) has no business anywhere near laws affecting his right to bear arms. What should voting rights advocates think of voter fraud vigilantes who call any and every form of election irregularity voter fraud?
Imposing new gun laws is counterproductive, many Republicans believe, because most criminals get guns illegally. More regulation just infringes upon honest Americans’ rights. But more regulations passed to prevent voting illegally? A nonissue.
The University of Texas-Austin's Daily Texan weighed in on that last week:
The fact that over half a million Texans do not have the proper form of ID in order to comply with the law and will thus be disenfranchised this November is apparently a nonissue. That these Texans belong to groups that historically vote Democratic is also a coincidence.
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker this month:
"I was at a town hall meeting yesterday in Appleton, and took questions from the crowd, and one person asked me how many cases of fraud there have been in the state. I said, does not matter if it was one or a hundred or a thousand. I ask amongst us, who would be that one person who would want to have our vote canceled out by a vote cast illegally?"How many married couples who "cancel out" each others' votes each election advocate laws preventing spouses from "stealing" their votes? Who amongst the tens of millions of real Americans without photo IDs would want to be kept from voting because of vigilantes' "downright goofy, if not paranoid" fears about what they insist might be a "widespread problem"?
Mark Fiore takes on the Voter Fraud Vigilantes here.