A Comfort of Consistency, by Justin Katz
Under the Government's Wing
5:48 PM, 07/ 5/10
Earning Happiness, by Justin Katz
Culture
1:46 PM, 07/ 5/10
Costa Encounters the Pitiful Enemy, by Justin Katz
Rhode Island Politics
9:31 AM, 07/ 5/10
Cutting the Cultural Meat Out of American Education, by Justin Katz
Education
8:24 AM, 07/ 5/10
Poetry of Life's Underlying Politics, by Justin Katz
Culture
8:26 PM, 07/ 4/10
A tribute to our country, by Donald B. Hawthorne
Liberty & American Founding
6:04 PM, 07/ 4/10
Blue Cross Advertisement from the Former Governor, by Justin Katz
Rhode Island Politics
4:49 PM, 07/ 4/10
I Can't Take It Anymore! Just One Small Post About Al Gore, by Monique Chartier
On a Lighter Note...
4:12 PM, 07/ 4/10
Civic Engagement Should Be Part of Life, by Justin Katz
Seeding the Grass Roots
11:58 AM, 07/ 4/10
Let's Be Clear: If You Oppose the Recent Changes to the Arizona Immigration Law, You Oppose United States Immigration Law, by Monique Chartier
Immigration
10:30 AM, 07/ 4/10
May 6, 2008
Re: MIA: Voter I.D. and Scrapping of the Straight Party Lever
Secretary of State Ralph Mollis appeared on WHJJ's Helen Glover Show this morning. He attempted to explain why a voter I.D. law that passed a US Supreme Court challenge by six to three cannot be brought to Rhode Island during this legislative session
The only logistic barrier to this law is the absence of a mechanism for the state to provide, free of charge, picture identification to those voters who presently lack it. The Secretary of State has been aware of this requirement for several months and has even suggested that such a requirement could be fulfilled by the DMV. Yet he took no steps in the interim months to facilitate this solution in time for legislative action.
What, then, is the real reason for the delay to this important election reform?


Invest in Multi-Partisan Pro-Business General Assembly Candidates
About Community Crier
About Engaged Citizen
Administrator



Not necessarily, or not only, the DMV which is what everyone seems to think of first.
Posted by: teqjack at May 6, 2008 5:47 PMSome years back, I was homeless (well, I had a room at the YMCA) and broke, but needed ID. The Department of Elderly Affairs is authorised to issue State-recognized photo-ID: at the time, two bucks vs. over forty for driver's license (understandable - just that DEA not widely publicised).
Could the DEA format be extended to other agencies/institutions? With fee rescinded? RIPTA, for example, issues photo IDs to disabled and elderly.
The actual answer to your question is this:
Ralph is in WAY over his head.
Posted by: Greg at May 6, 2008 6:53 PMI testified at one of Mollis' citizen forums on election reform-I was very specific about what was needed.The panel sat and drooled in their laps.The audience,on the other hand,got it.RI politicians are largely pond scum.They are so damned afraid of rocking the boat it is pitiful.
Posted by: joe bernstein at May 6, 2008 8:14 PM