How well and vigorously has that law been enforced, since its inception? And using your logic, we should just do away with ID laws for purchasing firearms, and simply focus on catching those who illegally possess them, sometime after having already obtained it. It doesn't make sense in either case.
And most of those rules get broken for a payoff that's several orders of magnitude greater than the rewarding feeling from casting one vote. It seems like your answer to my question is, "I have no proof for this, but those 17 states probably have unreported voter fraud happening all over the place because I said so."
Read up on Indiana's DMV woes prior to Mitch Daniels becoming governor, and the transformation it went after he was elected. Simply, hire a governor who believes that situation intolerable, and is worth enough of a shit to fix it.
Post script: Maybe shave a few hours from the thousands you've wasted on passing recreational marijuana laws, and put that attention to the DMV.
It just doesn't make sense that in order to be able to vote, you have to stop by the DMV first. It's a random obstacle thrown in for no reason whatsoever besides politics.
I'll bet if Colorado passed a law that gave free rolling papers with every vote cast, you'd have about a 95%+ turnout. Wait, maybe we're onto something...
There are plenty of statistics on how rare voter fraud is. I'm just pointing out that that makes sense, because the incentives aren't there. Contrary to what you apparently believe, most criminals don't walk around committing crimes because they just feel like breaking the law
Turnout isn't the problem. It took me 3 hours to vote in the primary, the line was down the block. And the Republicans are still waiting for a meaningful vote. HEYO! But seriously, all over the country folks have been leaving without voting because of long lines due to "processing" ID's and things.
who is even out there finding out how many people are voting under false names? there are plenty of nutjobs with too much time on their hands that would do this.
yeah "republicans" are the ones making the dmv so cost ineffective they have to reduce the hours. makes sense to me. do you really think there is some huge benefit out there to limit id's to the poor that there is a legit conspiracy by republicans to do so? what's the advantage? if anything the vast majority of republicans want everyone with an ID.
Really? How many, you think, would take a whole day going around and voting multiple places? And how many places could they vote within a day? And how many different names are they using, or are they using the same one and getting their vote discarded? I don't think it is as easy as you think. Evidence for it not being as easy as you think: http://www.wcti12.com/news/Woman-tr...purpose-pleads-guilty-to-voter-fraud/18305974