Is asked to provide proof for the widespread voter fraud... provides a link showing no proof of widespread voter fraud.
Mmm
oh come on, that's a government sanctioned report. do you really believe it doesn't happen in certain communities?
Is asked to provide proof for the widespread voter fraud... provides a link showing no proof of widespread voter fraud.
Mmm
That article for the most part talks about intimidation forcing people to vote a certain way how does requiring an ID card address this problem?
it would seem that the cognoscenti envisage a situation here that’s akin to old war films, where Gestapo agents constantly stopped ostensibly law abiding people and snarled, “Your papers, NOW!”
So we come back around to the government mandating ID for voting for no reason as even if there is voting fraud it isn’t impersonation so once again what is the point in the expense if it doesn’t address the problem?it doesn't but it shows there is a problem
This happened in the UK post WW2. Police abuse of identity cards was one reason they were abolished.
So was Lord Chief Justice Goddard of the King’s Bench Division. When the case went to appeal, he launched a blistering attack on the way police had adopted the law to suit their own ends.
“Because the police have powers, it does not follow that they ought to exercise them on all occasions as a matter of routine,” he said.
“From what we have been told it is obvious that the police now, as a matter of routine, demand the production of a national registration card whenever they stop or interrogate a motorist for whatever cause. This Act was passed for security purposes: it was never intended for the purposes for which it is now being used.”
ID cards became very unpopular after the war. The police were demanding ID cards for utterly trivial matters. You should try asking your grandparents.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_Cards_Act_2006#Historical_and_international_comparisons
From https://www.politics.co.uk/comment-analysis/2009/02/21/id-cards-abolished/
Etc.
While I’ll agree that anyone who’d been asked constantly to produce I.D. would have viewed the cards as unpopular, I’d suggest that the silent majority who were never asked, weren’t bothered about carrying them.
The step-mother has never had a passport, never left the UK. Doesn't drive. She does vote. Ironically probably Tory...
There's a lot of right wing nut jobs that are vehemently against this form of identification. And besides, biometric is only authentication, not authorisation.I'm the same, no driving license, and no need for a passport, but vote.
Why not biometric ID cards, or an app that uses biometric security on our phones? The only thing I should really need to prove who I am is my fingerprint or retina, we should be past paper documents being carried around with us by now.
All reports indicate that the vast majority of people were bothered. They put up with them during the war (note that the UK had ID cards during WW1) but they were not appreciated thereafter.
He said that he, his German wife, and their two sons thought nothing of it, it’s just a law, like having to stop at a red light, they don’t give it a thought.
It's funny how people are for voter ID when they find out it disenfranchises certain folk. When it's a singular 'we need ID' there is outrage about nanny state.
The problem wasn't the ID cards themselves; it was the abuse of the ID cards, particularly by the police.
Do you not think it opens up the risk for incumbent governments to rescind peoples right to vote to influence the outcome? For example, we could agree that anyone who had visited X websites or had X political stance would have their vote nullified.I would turn the argument on its head, why is that the same people who have been in favour of COVID passports to pervade all areas of every day life and create a total digital surveillance society akin to China seem to be the most hostile to voter ID for elections once every blue moon?
Lucky we are all sheep and wear masks.Police have already started using facial recognition technology, they won't need to ask you for an ID to know who you are.
Police have already started using facial recognition technology
The problem wasn't the ID cards themselves; it was the abuse of the ID cards, particularly by the police.
I think the point is, is there any evidence that it does? Genuinely interested. We can all have opinions, but is there data to back it up?oh come on, that's a government sanctioned report. do you really believe it doesn't happen in certain communities?
I’ve already accepted that you’ve researched it and established that British people resented being asked by the police to produce their I.D., as if they were suspects.
Maybe then the fault lay with the police in this country, my kid in Germany has never complained of being constantly asked for his ‘Personalausweis’, (I.D. Card), and to my absolute recall nor have any of my French relatives.