Tag Archives: Voting

PennDOT : Photo ID Requirements -November 2012


Photo ID Required for November 2012 Election

Voters will be required to show an acceptable photo ID on Election Day.  All photo IDs must contain an expiration date that is current, unless noted otherwise. Voter’s names on their photo IDs do not need to exactly match their voter registration, but the names must substantially conform
Acceptable IDs include:
  • PA Driver’s License or Non-driver’s License photo ID (IDs are valid for voting purposes 12 months past expiration date)
  • Valid U.S. passport
  • U.S. military ID active duty and retired military (a military or veteran’s ID must designate an expiration date or designate that the expiration date is indefinite). Military dependents’ ID must contain an expiration date

If you do not have one of these IDs, and require one for voting purposes, you may be entitled to get one FREE OF CHARGE at a PennDOT Driver License Center. To find the Driver License Center nearest you, and learn what supporting documentation you will need to get a photo ID visit PennDOT’s Voter ID Website or call the Department of State’s Voter ID Hotline at 1-877-VotesPA (868-3772).

NO ONE legally entitled to vote will be denied the right to do so.  If you do not have a photo ID, or are indigent and unable to obtain one without payment of a fee, you may cast a provisional ballot, and will have six days to provide your photo ID and/or an affirmation to your county elections office to have your ballot count.  If you have a religious objection to being photographed you can still vote by presenting a valid without-photo driver’s license or a valid without-photo ID card issued by PennDOT.

If you plan on voting by Absentee Ballot on the November 6, 2012 General Election, you will need to provide proof of identification.

Additional Information

Pennsylvania’s Voter ID Law

Documents

PA Voter ID Law – General FAQ

FAQ

PA Voter ID Law – Substantially Conform FAQ

PA Voter ID Law – Military Voters

FAQ

PA Voter ID Law – Care Facilities | Elderly | Disabled

FAQ

PA Voter ID Law – College and Universities

FAQ

PA Voter ID Law – Local Government Employees

FAQ

PA Voter ID Law – Homeless

FAQ

PA Care Facility Assisted Living Residencies

List

PA Care Facility Long Term Care Facilities

List

PA Care Facility Personal Care Homes

List

PA Institutions of Higher Learning

List

Department of State Voter ID Card

PA Voter ID Law – Department of State Voter ID Card

FAQ

Affirmation for Voters who do not Possess Proof of ID for Voting Purposes

Form

Application for Department of State Voter ID Card

Application

Proof of Residence Verification Form for Department of State Voter ID Card

Form

Department of State Voter ID Card Replacement

Application

Media

Voter ID Website Icon (link icon to http://www.votespa.com)

Icon

Voter ID Handout

Handout

News Releases

Department of State issued Voter ID Card

Release

Simplified method to obtain Photo ID for Pennsylvania-born voters

Release

Simplified process for PA voters with expired Driver’s Licenses, to obtain a Non-driver’s License Photo ID

Release

Elizabeth Warren for Senate : Massachusetts


Sep 18, 2012 by    

http://www.elizabethwarren.com

Like a lot of you, I came up in a family that worked hard and I’ve spent years fighting for working people.

I wasn’t looking to run for office but I see how Washington‘s rigged for the big guys:  oil companies, billionaires, and I can’t stand by. My fight’s for our families, for a level playing field. Scott Brown‘s not a bad guy, he doesn’t always vote the wrong way. But too often, on things that really matter, he’s not with you. With almost a quarter of a million people out of work in Massachusetts, Scott Brown voted against three of President Obama’s jobs bills. He voted against making millionaires pay the same tax rate as working families. And he voted to give more than 20 billion dollars in subsidies to the big oil companies. Kids are drowning in student loans, roads need repair, the deficit is sky high, and Scott Brown’s voting for giveaways to big oil? I wouldn’t do that. I’m Elizabeth Warren and I approve this message. I’d be in there fighting for you, not some of the time — all of the time.

Think Voter ID is Bad? Meet the Poll-Watchers


 

by

  • September 13, 2012
  • 8:00 am

Think Voter ID is Bad? Meet the Poll-Watchers

The Republican fight against voter rights has garnered the lions share of press attention, but as The Nation reports, the fight for voting rights extends well beyond the fight over Voter ID and includes the fight over who gets to raise the question over who is eligible to vote.

In at least twenty-four states any random person is authorized, if they feel so inclined, to question individual voters and ask them to “prove” their eligibility to vote. As restrictive and complicated Voter ID laws have passed state-by-state, conservative groups have realized there’s good leveraging in voter registration challenges and poll watcher trainings.

Tea Party loyalists have created True the Vote, an advocacy group which pushes Voter ID laws and training “patriots” to protect the polls. But as a new report from the Brennan Center for Justice, “Voter Challengers” spells out, these groups rely on American’s historical amnesia when it comes to race in order to promote their activities. Poll-watching can’t be divorced from its racially motivated roots, and groups like True the Vote understand that, even if they won’t acknowledge it.

“This history of discriminatory voter challenges casts doubt on the fraud-prevention arguments traditionally used to justify these laws,” writes Nicolas Riley, author of the Brennan Center report.

As it stands, thirty-nine states allow private citizens to challenge voters at the polls. According to the Brennan study, election officials in those states are “under immense time pressure to decide challenges quickly in order to avoid voting delays.” True the Vote is aware of this, but they put it differently, saying at a recent poll watcher training that election officials are “under immense pressure to do the wrong thing”—namely let undocumented immigrants vote, and let people vote multiple times.

As detailed in The Nation, even in 2012 voting restrictions are intimately tied to our collective history of racial segregation and discrimination.

In those states, people can make up a reason to challenge a voter’s rights without any evidence backing them up, and do so with impunity. It’s the same as when people drum up charges of voter fraud to pass voter ID bills and go unpunished when it’s revealed that no such fraud exists. You can’t fabricate a police report by saying you were mugged if you weren’t; you can’t file a false claim saying you lost possessions in a disaster. In both cases, you face jail and fines for bearing false witness, but not if you fabricate voter fraud or voter ineligibility in many states.

The Brennan report points out that South Carolina and Virginia allow people to challenge voters even if it’s nothing but a whim. Consider that both South Carolina and Virginia both have passed voter ID laws. In South Carolina, that law is currently being challenged in a federal court, where it was discovered that the law’s author Representative Alan Clemmons made racist comments about black voters in an e-mail while discussing how to pass the legislation.

Both states have strong True the Vote connections. In South Carolina, a member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, Cibby Krell, is a True the Vote volunteer with the Spartanburg Tea Party. In Virginia, the Virginia Voters Alliance is a group that trains Tea Party groups in challenging voters while pressuring Virginia election officials to engage in reckless purging processes.

Like other forms of evolved and modern discrimination, poll watching has become more sophisticated. But that doesn’t make it any less toxic to our democracy.

Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/think-voter-id-is-bad-meet-the-poll-watchers.html#ixzz26Rrg1j4G

 

Creating Media That Makes An Impact What’s more likely, voter fraud or a bee sting?


beesting2.JPG

 

Are you as furious as we are about the efforts to roll back the clock and take away people’s right to vote? It has us mad, but sometimes satire and humor is the best way to reach people.  So take a look, have a laugh, and then use video to spread the word.

Voter disenfranchisement is a very real issue that could affect more than 20 million voters this year. We have partnered with our friends at NAACP to create a video that will help people understand how absurd the claims of those who want to limit voting rights are. Take a look at “A Dangerous World” and pass it on to your friends to stop the limiting of citizens’ rights.

In 2011 there were 24 new laws and 2 executive actions restricting the right to vote in 19 states.* There is proposed legislation in 33 states right now that will further limit minorities, youth and senior citizens from voting.  We have a chance to change people’s thinking on this issue. Watch the video then send it to your friends, family, and co-workers. Let’s make sure everyone realizes how ridiculous the claims are and how devastating laws around voter ID and voter disenfranchisement will be to our country.

Thanks for your support.

Best,

Robert Greenwald

PS – If you are a member of CREDO, please go to their page and vote for our Rethink Afghanistan project.

You decide what matters : Vote


Earth Day Network has a chance to win $10,000 or more to support our green schools and environmental education campaigns through the Chase Community Giving competition! We just need your votes on Facebook.

Click here to vote for Earth Day Network.*

If you support our work to grow the environmental movement, create healthy green schools, plant millions of trees worldwide, empower women, educate voters, protect biodiversity and more, please take a moment to vote for us. With a couple of mouse clicks, you can help ensure these vital programs have the funding they need.

You get two votes*, and they must be used on two different charities, so please consider also voting for our partner organization, Worldwatch Institute.

– The Earth Day Network Team

*Anyone with a Facebook account can vote. Voting is open September 6-19, 2012. If you need help voting, you can find instructions here. If you happen to be a Chase customer, you get two additional votes; just login to ChaseGiving.com to claim those votes. Please then vote a second time for Earth Day Network and Worldwatch Institute.

Dear Carmen,

Earth Day Network has a chance to win $10,000 or more to support our green schools and environmental education campaigns through the Chase Community Giving competition! We just need your votes on Facebook.

Click here to vote for Earth Day Network.*

If you support our work to grow the environmental movement, create healthy green schools, plant millions of trees worldwide, empower women, educate voters, protect biodiversity and more, please take a moment to vote for us. With a couple of mouse clicks, you can help ensure these vital programs have the funding they need.

You get two votes*, and they must be used on two different charities, so please consider also voting for our partner organization, Worldwatch Institute.

– The Earth Day Network Team

*Anyone with a Facebook account can vote. Voting is open September 6-19, 2012. If you need help voting, you can find instructions here. If you happen to be a Chase customer, you get two additional votes; just login to ChaseGiving.com to claim those votes. Please then vote a second time for Earth Day Network and Worldwatch Institute.