Three Texas Democrats test positive for COVID-19 in Washington, D.C.

Attachments

  • 1626898589265.png
    1626898589265.png
    9.8 KB · Views: 11
5 Democrats who flew without masks on a charter flight to D.C. have now tested positive for COVID.

Thank you for creating another thread on this. We only had nine other currently active on the topic.
 
Requiring voters to engage a Notary is a restriction on voting.
A signature verified against your registration is just as valid.

You are bald faced liar!

Here is the ID law for Texas:

Voter identification laws by state


Voter ID in Texas


Texas requires voters to present photo identification (ID) while voting. Accepted forms of ID include Texas driver’s licenses, U.S. passports, and Texas handgun licenses. For a list of all accepted forms of ID, see below.

Voters who do not have a photo ID can obtain a Texas Election Identification Certificate (EIC) at any Texas driver’s license office during regular business hours. Voters can also obtain an Election Identification Certificate from a mobile station. Locations are listed here.[1]

Voters who do not have photo ID while voting may cast provisional ballots. See below for provisional ballot rules.

Note: This page covers identification requirements for those who are already registered to vote. Documents required for voter registration may differ.

Forms of accepted ID​

The following list of accepted ID was current as of November 2019. Click here for the Texas Secretary of State's page on accepted ID to ensure you have the most current information.

  • Texas driver’s license issued by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS)
  • Texas Election Identification Certificate issued by DPS
  • Texas Personal Identification Card issued by DPS
  • Texas handgun license issued by DPS
  • United States Military Identification Card containing the person’s photograph
  • United States Citizenship Certificate containing the person’s photograph
  • United States passport (book or card)
Identification provided by voters aged 18-69 must be expired for no more than four years before the election date. Voters aged 70 and older can use an expired ID card regardless of how long ago the ID expired.[1]

Voters who are unable to provide one of the ID options listed above can sign a Reasonable Impediment Declaration and provide one of the following supporting documents:[1]

  • Copy or original of a government document that shows the voter’s name and an address, including the voter’s voter registration certificate
  • Copy of or original current utility bill
  • Copy of or original bank statement
  • Copy of or original government check
  • Copy of or original paycheck
  • Copy of or original of (a) a certified domestic (from a U.S. state or territory) birth certificate or (b) a document confirming birth admissible in a court of law which establishes the voter’s identity (which may include a foreign birth document)
The following voters are exempt from showing photo ID:[1]

  • Voters with a disability
    • Voters with a disability "may apply with the county voter registrar for a permanent exemption to presenting an acceptable photo identification or following the Reasonable Impediment Declaration procedure in the county."
  • Voters who have a religious objection to being photographed
LINK

=====

It is VERY easy to vote in Texas, stop promoting lies!
 
You are bald faced liar!

Here is the ID law for Texas:

Voter identification laws by state


Voter ID in Texas


Texas requires voters to present photo identification (ID) while voting. Accepted forms of ID include Texas driver’s licenses, U.S. passports, and Texas handgun licenses. For a list of all accepted forms of ID, see below.

Voters who do not have a photo ID can obtain a Texas Election Identification Certificate (EIC) at any Texas driver’s license office during regular business hours. Voters can also obtain an Election Identification Certificate from a mobile station. Locations are listed here.[1]

Voters who do not have photo ID while voting may cast provisional ballots. See below for provisional ballot rules.

Note: This page covers identification requirements for those who are already registered to vote. Documents required for voter registration may differ.

Forms of accepted ID​

The following list of accepted ID was current as of November 2019. Click here for the Texas Secretary of State's page on accepted ID to ensure you have the most current information.

  • Texas driver’s license issued by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS)
  • Texas Election Identification Certificate issued by DPS
  • Texas Personal Identification Card issued by DPS
  • Texas handgun license issued by DPS
  • United States Military Identification Card containing the person’s photograph
  • United States Citizenship Certificate containing the person’s photograph
  • United States passport (book or card)
Identification provided by voters aged 18-69 must be expired for no more than four years before the election date. Voters aged 70 and older can use an expired ID card regardless of how long ago the ID expired.[1]

Voters who are unable to provide one of the ID options listed above can sign a Reasonable Impediment Declaration and provide one of the following supporting documents:[1]

  • Copy or original of a government document that shows the voter’s name and an address, including the voter’s voter registration certificate
  • Copy of or original current utility bill
  • Copy of or original bank statement
  • Copy of or original government check
  • Copy of or original paycheck
  • Copy of or original of (a) a certified domestic (from a U.S. state or territory) birth certificate or (b) a document confirming birth admissible in a court of law which establishes the voter’s identity (which may include a foreign birth document)
The following voters are exempt from showing photo ID:[1]

  • Voters with a disability
    • Voters with a disability "may apply with the county voter registrar for a permanent exemption to presenting an acceptable photo identification or following the Reasonable Impediment Declaration procedure in the county."
  • Voters who have a religious objection to being photographed
LINK

=====

It is VERY easy to vote in Texas, stop promoting lies!
You went through all that research and it has nothing to do with what I responded to Emily about
 
You went through all that research and it has nothing to do with what I responded to Emily about

Try finding this in the existing Texas law:

Requiring voters to engage a Notary is a restriction on voting.
A signature verified against your registration is just as valid.

Try showing this in the proposed addition to the Texas law:

Requiring voters to engage a Notary is a restriction on voting.
A signature verified against your registration is just as valid.

:rolleyes:
 
From what I gather about voting beliefs and habits:
1. Requiring ID requires knowledge that you can sign an Affidavit and vote anyway, or return later to prove up your vote. This favors White/upper class/higher educated/class privileged voters and discriminates against minorities like Blacks, Latino or nonnative speakers who are less likely to go through this much trouble to vote, thus suppressing their votes

2. Mailin ballots are more likely to favor minority and liberal voters, since conservatives tend to vote in person and do not trust mailin systems to be accurately used or counted. UNLESS these mailins require NOTARIZATION under penalty of perjury, to restrict their use only to people willing to prove their votes and signatures are valid, which again, favors conservative/white privileged voters with ability to meet this requirement more readily and suppresses liberal/minority/lower income voters less likely to go through the trouble of notarization.
So basically you think black people cannot do anything without a white person helping them? Both the methods you are talking about makes it easier to cheat and after 2020. I would ban mail in voting, except for the disabled and military.
 
You have?

Then where is the prosecution?
You got nothing
Thanks to the LACK of notarization on mail in ballots "under penalty of perjury" , there will never be court standard proof of either validity or of fraud.

rightwinger before you demand "burden of proof" on others, where is YOUR proof that those oppoents ever consented to rule changes that allowed mailin ballots to be sent out and such votes to be submitted and counted without any notarization?

Whoever changed and used these rules without Notarization is responsible for the lack of legal standards of proof.

Without Notarization, the contested mailin ballots remain faith based.

Neither side can establish their beliefs through govt without violating First Amendment protections and Civil Rights Accommodations of the other half of the nation espousing the opposite beliefs.

By Constitutional ethics and Public Accommodations, people of either faith based beliefs must be treated equally without Discrimination by Creed.

Good luck with that!
 
Thanks Emily
Mediation and conflict resolution would prevent this kind of deadlock vote.

Both parties can agree to represent and serve their respective constituents without conflict or competing to dominate the other

No thank you rightwinger
Your insistence in only using govt to exercise your own political beliefs, instead of seeking common policy that defends all people's interests consent and beliefs, causes this kind of all or nothing, either or dichotomy.

Both sides lose this way

No thank you rightwinger
I believe Constitutional principles and ethics call for better solutions everyone can agree to
 
Thanks to the LACK of notarization on mail in ballots "under penalty of perjury" , there will never be court standard proof of either validity or of fraud.

rightwinger before you demand "burden of proof" on others, where is YOUR proof that those oppoents ever consented to rule changes that allowed mailin ballots to be sent out and such votes to be submitted and counted without any notarization?

Whoever changed and used these rules without Notarization is responsible for the lack of legal standards of proof.

Without Notarization, the contested mailin ballots remain faith based.

Neither side can establish their beliefs through govt without violating First Amendment protections and Civil Rights Accommodations of the other half of the nation espousing the opposite beliefs.

By Constitutional ethics and Public Accommodations, people of either faith based beliefs must be treated equally without Discrimination by Creed.

Good luck with that!
 

Forum List

Back
Top