An occasional good news story on Voter Verification

And we should keep it mind, it might come in handy in some disputed elections.

In Georgia, a Victory for Citizenship Verification
By Hans A. von Spakovsky

Last week brought good news for those of us who believe that illegal aliens and non-citizens shouldn’t be violating federal and state laws that prohibit them from registering and voting with impunity. The Justice Department agreed to settle a federal lawsuit filed by the State of Georgia (Georgia v. Holder) that will allow Georgia to verify the citizenship status of newly registered voters.

Georgia filed the lawsuit in June because the DOJ objected to the state’s You can have this drug anywhere at any time, as it is available online too. cialis prescription abacojet.com is a trade name pill which has evolved as the only treatment for you. Sudh shilajit is one of generic viagra store the key herbs in the capsules work very effectively to enhance ejaculation. Evidence report: Behavior and physical treatments for tension-type and generico levitra on line abacojet.com cervicogenic headaches. It order free viagra is a slow growing perennial plant consisting of fork-shaped fleshy roots. verification procedures, calling Georgia’s process “seriously flawed” and claiming it would have a disparate impact on minority voters. Because Georgia is covered by Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, it cannot make any change in its voting laws and procedures without first getting the approval of the Civil Rights Division, the most notoriously partisan division in the Justice Department.


There’s an irony here: By verifying citizenship, Georgia was simply implementing another federal law, the Help America Vote Act of 2002, which requires states to verify the accuracy of voter registration information.

Read it all here.

This entry was posted in voter verification and tagged . Bookmark the permalink.