Some quotes on the two states with the strictest voter id laws:

Remember the storm that arose on the political left after the U.S. Supreme
Court upheld the constitutionality of Indiana's voter ID law last April?
According to the left, voter ID was a dastardly Republican plot to prevent
Democrats from winning elections by suppressing the votes of minorities,
particularly African-Americans.




The two states with the strictest voter ID requirements are Indiana and
Georgia. Both require a government-issued photo ID. According to figures
released by Prof. Michael McDonald of George Mason University, the overall
national turnout of eligible voters was 61.6%, the highest turnout since the
1964 election.




So what happened in Georgia where the ACLU, the NAACP and other such groups
claimed the state's photo ID law was intended to depress black turnout?
According to figures released by Curtis Gans at American University, Georgia
had the largest turnout in its history, with nearly four million voters. The
Republican turnout was up only 0.22 percentage points; the Democratic
turnout was up an astonishing 6.1 percentage points, rising from 22.66% of
the eligible voting population to 28.74% of the eligible population.

The overall turnout in Georgia increased 6.7 percentage points from the 2004
election -- the second highest increase in turnout of any state in the
country. According to the JCPES, the black share of the statewide vote
increased in Georgia from 25% in the 2004 election, when the photo ID law
was not in effect, to 30% in the 2008 election, when the photo ID law was in
effect.




In Indiana, which the Supreme Court said had the strictest voter ID law in
the country, the turnout of Democratic voters in the November election
increased by 8.32 percentage points. That was the largest increase in
Democratic turnout of any state in the country. The increase in overall
turnout in Indiana was the fifth highest in the country, but only because
the turnout of Republican voters actually went down 3.57 percentage points.
The nearby state of Illinois (no photo ID requirement) had an increase in
Democratic turnout of only 4.4 percentage points -- nearly half Indiana's
increase.




The JCPES predicts that when the final turnout numbers are in for the 2008
election, black turnout will probably reach a historic high of almost 67%
and likely surpass white turnout for the first time. All at a time when
about half of the states have passed various forms of voter ID requirements,
including two states with strict photo ID laws.




The claim that Republican legislatures in Georgia and Indiana passed voter
ID to depress Democratic turnout is demonstrably false. But even if it were
true, they obviously failed miserably to achieve that objective given the
huge increases in Democratic and minority turnout in both states.





Read more here: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123327839569631609.html

J

-

We have tried spending money. We are spending more than we have ever spent
before and it does not work. I say after eight years of this Administration
we have just as much unemployment as when we started. … And an enormous debt
to boot! - Henry Morgenthau

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