Wis. governor Walker to change the registration rules again.

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Sep 7, 2012
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Nov 19, 2012 at 5:55 pm
Two weeks after Barack Obama and Sen.-elect Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) carried the state of Wisconsin with the support of minorities and young voters, Gov. Scott Walker (R) announced one of his major policy proposals for the upcoming session: ending the state’s 40-year old law that allows citizens to register to vote on Election Day.
And with Republicans now back in control of the Wisconsin state legislature, Walker may well get his way next year.
In 2008, Wisconsin enjoyed the second highest turnout of any state in the nation (72.4 percent of eligible voters cast a ballot), due largely to the fact the Badger State law allows residents who aren’t registered or have recently moved to register at the polls. That year, approximately 460,000 people used Election Day Registration, 15 percent of all Wisconsinites who cast a ballot.
Walker pressed his case for ending same-day registration during a speech at the Ronald Reagan Library in California on Friday:
“States across the country that have same-day registration have real problems because the vast majority of their states have poll workers who are wonderful volunteers, who work 13 hour days and who in most cases are retirees,” Walker said. “It’s difficult for them to handle the volume of people who come at the last minute. It’d be much better if registration was done in advance of election day. It’d be easier for our clerks to handle that. All that needs to be done.“
Wisconsin was the first state to enact Election Day Registration in 1971, followed soon by states like Minnesota and Maine. Today, eleven states have laws allowing citizens to register at the polls. These states enjoy the highest turnout in the nation not by chance, but because Election Day Registration boosts turnout by 7 to 14 percentage points. In addition, studies show that minorities, poorer voters, and students benefit the most from being permitted to register on Election Day.
Republican legislators in Maine attempted a similar move last year, repealing the state’s 40-year-old Election Day Registration law. However, a citizen backlash erupted, sending the matter to a statewide referendum where voters rebuked the legislature and restored the law by a 2-to-1 margin.
The last time Walker and his Republican allies won complete control of the legislature in 2010, they immediately passed a discriminatory voter ID law that would have disenfranchised people like 84-year-old Ruthelle Frank had it not been blocked by a state judge.
Now, with Wisconsin State Republicans riding high, they appear to again be setting their sights on chipping away at voting rights."


So according to Gov Walker he is helping out the poll volunteers by eliminating some of the work they do. Just one more way to reduce the amount of voting and help out his republican party.
 

pickles

Senior Member
Apr 20, 2009
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You make a good point here but in this recient election , it has been shown that there were several groups that used this law to cast illegal votes as well.
In my state, in the last election.
A top position was one by less than two hundred votes.
Less than a year later it was found that over 2,500 votes were illegal.
Now where we have such close elections ,one should take note, that the majority of illegal votes cast were cast by those that supported the person who won this top positon.
It may be in the best interest of all people, to make sure votes cast are checked and proven to be legal.
I have to ask why when registration is so simple and convenient, why so many fail to take care of such a simple task.
The excuse of I just moved is a weak excuse now, with early voting being availble now to so many.
I believe it is important to make sure all votes are legal, simply because, there are so many cases of illegal votes happening these days.
I have to question why, so many would favor the oppertunity for fraud, over being sure that all votes are valid?
I know I want my vote to count, as Im sure all would like their vote to count as well.
Every illegal vote , has the power to cancel another's vote.
We should all be concerned about any vote that was not valid, and we should do all we can to prevent all illegal votes.

God bless
pickles
 
Oct 27, 2012
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Isn't it something to see the extent of what these folks will do just to try to disenfranchise voters! But America is certainly watching their every move you can be assured of that and when voters see the division they are causing by their blatant disregard for the inclusion of people in this country who used to be able to register at the polls they will certainly have the last say on their fate.