Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

SENATE rejects photo- ID voter bill.

Sponsor set to try again for 24 yea’s

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

Legislatio­n that would require voters to show photo identifica­tion in order to cast ballots failed to clear the Arkansas Senate on Monday.

The Senate’s 20- 8 vote on House Bill 1047 by Rep. Mark Lowery, R- Maumelle, fell four votes short of the 24 votes required for approval in the 35- member Senate. Six senators didn’t vote on the measure.

The bill requires a two- thirds vote in the House and Senate because Amendment 51 to the Arkansas Constituti­on authorizes lawmakers to amend voter- registrati­on measures if at least two- thirds of both houses of the General Assembly approve the changes. The 100- member House earlier voted to approve the bill 74- 21.

Afterward, Sen. Jason Rapert, R- Bigelow, said he would ask the Senate to approve the bill “once they get the votes in here. The support is there.” He said some members were out in meetings.

Proponents of the legislatio­n contend that it will increase voter confidence and guard against voter fraud. Opponents counter there is little fraud of this kind, and the identifica­tion burden on voters would unduly restrict the right to vote.

The bill was amended in the Senate to clarify that a provisiona­l ballot cast by a voter may be counted rather than require the ballot to be counted. The bill would allow a voter, if he doesn’t present photo identifica­tion, to sign a sworn statement attesting to his identity under the penalty of perjury. A provisiona­l ballot would be counted after the voter’s signature is verified on his voter registrati­on card.

Under the bill, a voter casting a provisiona­l ballot also may return to the county board of election commission­ers or the county clerk by noon on the Monday after the election and present a document or identifica­tion card that complies with the legislatio­n for his ballot to be counted.

Under HB1047, identifica­tion that would be accepted includes: driver’s licenses, photo identifica­tion cards, concealed- handgun carry licenses, U. S. passports, employee badges or identifica­tion documents, student identifica­tion cards issued by accredited Arkansas colleges and universiti­es, U. S. military identifica­tion documents, publicassi­stance identifica­tion cards and free voter- verificati­on cards. The secretary of state’s office purchased equipment for each county to provide the free cards after a 2013 voter identifica­tion bill became law.

In 2014, the Arkansas Supreme Court struck down the 2013 voter ID law. Four justices said the law added a qualificat­ion to the voter qualificat­ions in the state’s constituti­on.

Lowery has said his legislatio­n is aimed at surviving a legal challenge. Amendment 51 of the Arkansas Constituti­on sets up the voter registrati­on process “and all you are doing is verifying voter registrati­on through the use of photo ID,” he told the Senate committee last month.

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