For now, at least, there\u2019s not going to be a voter \u201cprotection\u201d ballot measure on Missouri’s\u00a0 November 2012 ballot, and that\u2019s good news for voters. But this is not a local story, and it’s far from over. It’s just the one that I live closest to. And it’s emblematic of what’s happening in many states.<\/p>\n
In 2011, the Missouri legislature passed a ballot measure that, if approved by voters, would amend the state constitution to make it easier for lawmakers to make it harder for people to vote. Ostensibly, this measure will \u201cprotect\u201d us from voter fraud. Recently, [March 11, 2012], a Missouri circuit court judge rejected the ballot measure<\/a>, which had the Orwellian name of \u201cVoter Protection Act.\u201d<\/p>\n Behind the \u201cprotection\u201d subterfuge, of course, is the real motive: an effort to suppress voting by people who Republicans would love to keep away from the polls. The measure would require voters to present government-issued photo ID at the polls. The catch is that not everyone has a driver\u2019s license or state ID, and to get one, you have to present your birth certificate or citizenship documents\u2014and those cost money and time. And who are the people who don\u2019t have these items? Mostly, it\u2019s low-income and minority voters\u2014and those demographic groups tend to vote for Democrats.<\/p>\n But what truly amazes me about the latest Missouri voter suppression bill is who is sponsoring it. It\u2019s State Rep. Shane Schoeller, a Republican from Springfield, Missouri. Schoeller is currently a candidate for\u2026.wait for it\u2026Missouri Secretary of State, and the juxtaposition of his voter suppression bill with his electoral quest is ironic, to say the least. In Missouri, the Secretary of State is in charge of elections. He or she oversees registration, candidate filing, voter registration and elections. You would think that the main missions of that job would be to make sure that everyone who\u2019s eligible to vote can actually vote, to make sure the voting process is fair, transparent and therefore trustworthy, and to enfranchise as many people as possible, as a way of promoting participation in the democratic process. I guess that\u2019s not how Schoeller sees the job. By the looks of the bill he introduced, it seems that he views\u00a0 becoming Secretary of State as a way of ensuring victories for his fellow Republicans.<\/p>\n The judge who threw out Schoeller\u2019s latest attempt at voter suppression said that the name of the ballot measure, the \u201cVoter Protection Act,\u201d violated truth-in-advertising requirements.The problem is that the wording in the ballot measure doesn\u2019t contain the phrase \u201cvoter protection,\u201d and, under Missouri rules, you at least have to show that your law is somehow related to what it\u2019s named for.<\/p>\n Unfortunately, the most recent legal setback to the voter-suppression initiative hasn’t discouraged Schoeller from reintroducing the same thing all over again.\u00a0 Apparently, nothing deters the vote suppressors from their mission: not the fact that photo voter ID was struck down by the Missouri Supreme Court in 2006<\/a>, and not even the fact that that studies of allegations of voter fraud in Missouri<\/a> have turned up no evidence of fraud that could have been prevented by requiring photo ID. Less than two weeks after the Cole County Circuit Court threw out the 2011 ballot initiative, Schoeller has introduced a new bill, with ballot language that supposedly more closely conforms to the rules, into the Missouri legislature, and just today [April 3, 2012], a Missouri House committee approved the do-over.\u00a0 Schoeller hopes to get it passed before the legislative session ends in June, so that it can be placed on the November 2012 ballot.<\/p>\n