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View Poll Results: Are you a voter?
I'm not old enough to register 0 0%
I'm old enough to register, but never have registered to vote 0 0%
I used to be registered to vote, but have moved, etc. now am not currently registered 1 5.26%
I vote every single local election, even school boards! 11 57.89%
I vote most biannual elections for Congress and stuff 5 26.32%
I only vote for President and big elections every 4 years 2 10.53%
I vote really rarely - just too busy, or I have no interest 0 0%
Voters: 19. You may not vote on this poll

 
 
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Old 09-27-2012, 07:15 PM
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Riot Riot is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 14,153
Default Wisconsin Voter ID law overturned for Nov. election

Breaking today: Walker/ALEC restrictive Voter ID law will not be in place for November election.

May be reviewed at later time.


Quote:
State Supreme Court declines to take up voter ID, for now
By Patrick Marley of the Journal Sentinel
Sept. 27, 2012 3:50 p.m.

Madison - The state Supreme Court on Thursday declined - for now - to take up lower court orders blocking Wisconsin's voter ID law, the latest sign the law likely will not be in place for the Nov. 6 presidential election.

In a pair of brief orders, the high court said if it were to take up a review of the law, it would hear arguments in both cases at the same time. But it noted that initial appeal briefs had not yet been filed in one of those cases, and so it is taking neither.

Two Dane County judges separately blocked the law this year for violating different provisions of the state constitution. Thursday's ruling was applauded by opponents of the voter ID law.

GOP Gov. Scott Walker and Republicans in the Legislature approved the voter ID law last year, just as their colleagues did elsewhere around the country, saying it would help ensure fair elections. Democrats largely opposed Wisconsin's law, arguing it was an effort to prevent minorities and low-income people from voting.

Lawsuits followed and two Dane County judges struck down the law. One found the Legislature did not have the power under the state constitution to impose a photo ID requirement on voters; the other found the photo ID requirement placed an unreasonable burden on the right to vote guaranteed in the state constitution

Continued

www.jsonline.com
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