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Pure, unadulterated BS. To have an honest election outcome, you have to have an honest election.
There is no evidence that voter ID laws would improve the "honesty" of elections. There is on the other hand a lot of evidence that they will prevent otherwise eligible voters from exercising the franchise.
Using an absentee ballot IS voting, so how is it not comparable? If you are a registered voter, then you can request a ballot and it will be sent to the address that the Voting Commission has on record, for the military it's a bit different. It is the individuals responsibility to update their information.
If students are residents in their state, then they can vote in their home of record. To become a resident of their college town/city, they must meet certain requirements such as having their vehicle registered or have a utility bill. Most college kids and young adults do not vote in local elections or even pay attention to local politics, and with politicians targeting colleges they seem to get spoon-fed their views.
S. Carolina attempted to implement voter I.D. laws and even offered to bus the poor, elderly, and others to get a state I.D. free of charge, but apparently that is still racist. Go figure.
I should think a college student is of majority age and is a resident of where he or she chooses. While a state may have a regulation governing tuition that does not extend to residency. In NV if you work or have a car instate for more than 30 days you are considered a resident...and they want the high registration fee for your vehicle. You can register to vote when you register your vehicle.
'I should think"
Instead of "thinking", find out what the laws are.
Majority age has nothing to do with it.
Your premise is ALL wrong.
IF you chooseto become a resident of the state you are going to college in, you GIVE UP residency in your former state.
I do not know all the Nevada residency laws buy, I did find this 9which is common in most states)
"I have lived in Nevada for 12 months, but I never changed my driver’s license. This is not a university-established requirement. This is a requirement of the State of Nevada. Nevada law requires new residents to change your license or ID within 30 days of relocating. You can keep your out-of-state license if you are to be considered an out-of-state student. The 12-month period during which you establish residency does not start until you change your license. Other acceptable items include a Nevada voter registration card or vehicle registration. UNLV Graduate College | Admissions | Residency FAQ
"First-Time Registration Nevada law requires you to register your vehicle with the state if you have recently:
I have expired ID and would not be able to vote in person. (By staying with my GF where she lives a few blocks outside of town while the polls are open, I am eligible for an absentee ballot as long as I have it mailed to her house or somewhere else outside of town.)
College towns love to regulate students, I say No Regulation Without Representation. This regulation invariably harms poor nonstudents, e.g. max unrelated occupancy of two prices out poor nonstudents, so as a former poor nonstudent resident, I had a vested interest in students voting at school in order to slow thhe regulatory creep. Similarly, every self-supporting student has a vested interest in voting at college because the regulations substantially affect where and how (expensively) you will live there.
"I have expired ID" What part of taking responsibility for your own actions do you NOT understand?
Being "poor" or NOT being "poor" has nothing to do with it.
The VAST majority of students have a drivers license which is accepted in every state, I believe.
If you are going to school out of state it is NOT hard to request an absentee Ballot.
You register vote in the district of the state where you are a permanent resident.
If you want to vote where you go to college you can becomes a permanent resident of that state.
??? SCOTUS said (1971?) that students can vote at college if that is were they reside more than half the year. Many states have similar rules for tax purposes, e.g. at least 183 days a year makes you a (taxable) resident.
Some snowbirds claim a homestead exemption in two states, where is the outrage and the crackdown?
So, what is the problem? You vote ONCE where you choose to claim as your residence.
Florida USED to let you keep your old license from your previous state. I believe they have changed it and you have to claim one state or the other.
I don't know the laws of other states but, I believe you can only vote in 1 state.
Using an absentee ballot IS voting, so how is it not comparable?
How do you check an ID via absentee voting?
Quote:
Originally Posted by lowrimol
If students are residents in their state, then they can vote in their home of record. To become a resident of their college town/city, they must meet certain requirements such as having their vehicle registered or have a utility bill. Most college kids and young adults do not vote in local elections or even pay attention to local politics, and with politicians targeting colleges they seem to get spoon-fed their views.
Let's pretend all of that is true. So what?
Quote:
Originally Posted by lowrimol
S. Carolina attempted to implement voter I.D. laws and even offered to bus the poor, elderly, and others to get a state I.D. free of charge, but apparently that is still racist. Go figure.
Flaccid gestures do not ameliorate the intent of the law.
The racist claim is only to keep illegals at the polls.
Only the disgusting left would make a claim that a law for all is racist. And there are enough idiotic people around here that agree with the lib pols on this. Can't fix stupid.
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