[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 108 (Tuesday, July 19, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H5159]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT TO VOTE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. LEE. Mr. Speaker, the right to vote is a fundamental right which
is at the heart of this Nation. This right is under attack.
I came to this floor, after the stolen Presidential elections in
Florida and Ohio, to protest the results of these two elections that
were filled with voter suppression. Now, years later, 34 States, once
again, in our map of shame, require voters to present IDs to vote in
Federal, State, and local elections. And in 15 of those States, voters
must present a photo ID. Some States require that the ID be government-
issued, mind you, in order to cast a ballot.
However, for any number of reasons, 21 million Americans do not have
a government-issued ID required by these voter ID laws; and, thus, the
fundamental right of American citizens is taken away. Most State
legislatures have enacted or have proposed legislation echoing similar
detrimental voting changes. Many of these bills have only one true
purpose, and that is the disenfranchisement of specific populations of
eligible voters.
In California, unfortunately, there is a voter ID bill pending to
suppress voter participation. It would cost, mind you, $26, $26 just to
get the required documents to qualify for a government ID. This
certainly looks like a poll tax to me, which all of us from the South
know and remember as a way to keep African Americans from voting.
These voter ID laws have a partisan agenda seeking to deny specific
populations of people the opportunity to not to vote, which is really
very shameful before they have an opportunity to elect their
representatives in government. And we cannot allow this.
So I have to thank Congresswoman Marcia Fudge, the Congressional
Black Caucus, and all of our colleagues for their voices to protect the
right for all citizens across this Nation. And I urge the Department of
Justice to be vigilant and aggressive in protecting the civil rights
and voting rights of Americans.
We go around the world preaching democracy and the importance of
voting; yet we are going in the opposite direction in our own country.
Now I would like to yield to the gentleman from Tennessee,
Representative Cohen.
Mr. COHEN. Thank you, Ms. Lee. I appreciate your yielding, and I
appreciate Congresswoman Fudge for bringing this issue to the floor.
We previously heard from other Congresspeople and particularly the
distinguished Congressman John Lewis, who was a civil rights hero in
the 60s and risked his life, as others did, and gave their lives for
the right to vote.
We are experiencing today, after International Nelson Mandela Day,
yesterday was Nelson Mandela's 91st birthday. Next month we'll dedicate
a memorial to Dr. Martin Luther King on the Mall. When you think about
Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela and John Lewis, you've got to
think about voting rights and how far the Nation and the world have
come in the last 45 years and how long it took to get there.
And to think that there are impediments being placed in the way of
people to vote, whether intentional or not, I believe those impediments
are being placed there intentionally to dissuade African Americans and
Democratic-leaning groups from voting in the 2012 election, Rovian
tactics to stop President Obama from being re-elected and from the
public to pick Democratic Representatives to switch the priorities of
this House to those that would be more reflective of the middle class
and people who are yearning for opportunity.
{time} 1050
But whether they're intentional or not, if they have an effect that
is harmful to voting rights, just like other laws, if they have an
effect in practice, they are just as harmful and just as wrong as if
they were intended. And there is no question that these types of
impediments to require people to get voter IDs, when 25 percent of
African Americans in this country don't have that type of ID and 8
percent of Caucasians are in the same limitation of not having that
type of ID, it's obvious that African Americans and students and others
are the ones that are designed to be targeted by these laws.
In my State of Tennessee that passed such a law, to get a photo ID is
not easy. I went myself to get a driver's license with a photo ID. It
took 1 hour and 20 minutes, constantly standing in line, no place to
sit. It was not easy and people will not be able to do it. It will be
an impediment to them and limit their opportunity to vote. It's wrong.
I would like to thank Ms. Lee and Congresswoman Fudge for bringing
this to the American public's attention.
Ms. LEE. Thank you.
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