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SUPPORT FOR LAX VOTER REGISTRATION
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SUPPORT FOR LAX VOTER REGISTRATION
By guest writer Tom Tancredo    January 29, 2011

    Last Wednesday in Colorado, a committee of the State Senate voted to kill a 
bill to require proof of citizenship to register to vote.  The vote was along 
party lines: All three Democrat legislators voted against the bill, and the 
committee's two Republicans voted for it. 

    Why has the integrity of our voter rolls become a partisan issue? 

    The main argument heard against the proposal was that it would impose 
significant burdens on some individuals with unconventional "lifestyles." A 
utility bill ought to be enough, apparently. 

    Another bogus argument is that somehow the requirement to show a birth 
certificate or naturalization papers violates a person's civil rights.  But 
federal courts have ruled many times that the requirement for basic documentary 
evidence of citizenship is not an onerous burden intended to obstruct voting by 
any minority of citizens.  This argument, in fact, turns logic on its head, but 
that does not deter the opponents of ballot integrity.

    We are not talking here about producing birth certificates to vote on 
Election Day, only for registering to vote, which people do only when they 
register the first time or move across state lines.  Very little identification 
is required to vote on Election Day, but that is a different topic. 

    Shouldn't there be some reasonable safeguards to guarantee that the  votes 
of qualified electors are not canceled out by the votes of persons who are not 
citizens?  Evidently, that idea is now controversial among Colorado Democrat 
leaders. 

    Admittedly, given the current technology available for counterfeit 
documents, the requirement of a birth certificate is not a foolproof method of 
establishing citizenship.  But it should be an acceptable minimum standard. 

    The concept of ballot integrity is so fundamental that it is hard for 
ordinary citizens to comprehend opposition to such basic safeguards as proof of 
citizenship.  Does the Democratic Party have a vested interest in lax standards 
for voter registration? 

    Such questions raise the possibility that there is something else going on 
besides a liberal deference to "unorthodox lifestyles" and a concern for the 
very modest cost of locating and producing necessary documents once every 10 or 
20 years. 

    That there is a serious debate over this proposal may be another indicator 
of cultural balkanization.  Maybe we as a society are losing sight of the 
special quality and unique privileges of citizenship.  It is possible that what 
is under attack in this instance is not the burden of producing birth 
certificates or naturalization papers -- which we must do on numerous other 
occasions in our lives -- but an attack on the concept
of citizenship itself. 

    What's the big deal, some will ask.  Aren't we all members of "the American 
family"?  Aren't we "all God's children"?  And, of course, we all know that "No 
person is illegal."  Is it "old thinking" to believe that only citizens should 
be entitled to vote?  Is this perhaps just another form of discrimination 
against the less fortunate amongst us? 

    In the past two or three years, communities from Oregon to Maine, Berkeley 
to Austin, have debated the idea of allowing noncitizens to vote in 
school-board elections. After all, the argument runs, the noncitizen parents of 
children in the school system have a stake in how the schools  operate.  But it 
does not take a rocket scientist to see that the same argument could apply to 
participation any level of government. 

    A fundamental tenet of American law has always been that noncitizens are 
welcomed as guests in our house.  We welcome tens of millions of tourists, 
exchange students, business travelers and temporary workers here on what are 
labeled in federal law as non-immigrant visas, visas with expiration dates.  
They have no permanent and lasting stake in the American community, as they do 
in their homeland. 

    The only visa without an expiration date is the one given to legal 
immigrants, who are called in federal law, legal permanent residents. After 
five years of legal residence, they can apply for citizenship, and then, as 
naturalized citizens, they are given the right to vote as full and equal 
partners with native-born citizens -- a full equality not granted to 
naturalized citizens in many other countries, including our southern neighbor, 
Mexico. 

    About one million foreign-born persons become naturalized citizens 
annually, and the percentage of legal immigrants seeking citizenship has been 
rising.  Ironically, according to polls, it is these new citizens who are the 
most fervent in the belief that voting is a privilege reserved for citizens, 
and they are eager to produce their naturalization papers when registering to 
vote for the first time. 

    If the Democratic Party wishes to grant illegal aliens the right to vote, 
it should be honest and propose a law to that effect instead of insulting our 
intelligence with talk of "lifestyle issues."  That proposal might win support 
in some quarters, and might even be enacted into law some day if a majority of 
Americans come to think in terms now popular in the Colorado Democrat Caucus. 

--Tom Tancredo, former congressman, currently serves as chairman of the Rocky 
Mountain Foundation and co-chairman of TeamAmericaPac. Tancredo is the author 
of "In Mortal Danger: The Battle for America's Border and  Security."
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