Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Senate clears voter ID measure to appear on 2018 ballot

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

The number of proposed constituti­onal amendments on the 2018 general election ballot rose to two Tuesday when the Senate approved a proposal that would require future voters to present photo identifica­tion.

The Senate voted 24-8 on

House Joint Resolution 1016 by Rep. Robin Lundstrum, R-Elm Springs. On Feb. 22, the House voted 73-21 for the proposed amendment. Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s approval is not required to get the measure on the ballot.

Lawmakers, who can place up to three proposed amendments on the November 2018 ballot, earlier this session approved a proposal to limit damage awards in civil lawsuits.

The proposed amendments must be approved by voters to become law.

A total of 34 states have laws that request or require voters to show some form of identifica­tion at the polls, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. Arkansas is included on that list because poll workers request that voters show identifica­tion but it is not required.

The proposal in HJR1016, if approved by 2018 voters, would require the General Assembly to enact a law requiring voters to present valid photo identifica­tion before they receive ballots at the polls. Also, those voting by

absentee ballot would have to enclose a copy of their valid photo identifica­tions with their ballots. The General Assembly also would have to establish the acceptable types of identifica­tion.

Under the proposal, a person without a valid photo ID at a polling place would be permitted to cast a provisiona­l ballot. An absentee ballot not accompanie­d by a copy of a valid photo ID also would be considered provisiona­l. A provisiona­l ballot would be counted only if the voter subsequent­ly certified the provisiona­l ballot in the manner provided by law.

Sen. Bryan King, R-Green Forest, told senators that the proposal was written very broadly.

King said the 2019 General Assembly could, with a majority vote, require absentee voters who don’t present their photo IDs with their ballots to sign a sworn statement attesting to their identities under the penalty of perjury.

But Sen. Linda Chesterfie­ld, D-Little Rock, told her colleagues that “across this country, we are seeing more and more photo IDs” required of voters. “Too much of the effect has been to disenfranc­hise large numbers of minorities, especially senior citizens,” she said.

The proposed amendment is a solution in search of a problem, she said.

Chesterfie­ld said the Legislatur­e should provide a pathway for people who have never had photo IDs.

Under the proposal, the state would be required to issue photo identifica­tion at no charge to eligible voters who don’t have such identifica­tion.

Also, the proposal would require an incapacita­ted person at home who wants to vote by absentee ballot to send a copy of his photo ID to strangers, she said.

“If you become disabled and you have to send that photo ID to strangers, how comfortabl­e are you with them protecting the integrity of the ID?” Chesterfie­ld asked.

King said the state has had cases of voter impersonat­ion, and there were thousands of fraudulent voter registrati­ons in the previous election in Arkansas, he said.

The proposed amendment “would allow more identifica­tion to be able to stop voter fraud,” King said.

He said he believes in the integrity of the right to vote, but also believes in protecting the integrity of the result.

In 2014, the state Supreme Court overturned a 2013 law requiring voters to present photo identifica­tion.

That law was enacted when the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e overrode then-Democratic Gov. Mike Beebe’s veto of the legislatio­n, sponsored by King. The American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit challengin­g the law in 2014, and four of the court’s seven justices ruled that the law improperly added a qualificat­ion to the voter qualificat­ions in the state’s constituti­on.

According to Article 3, Section 1, of the Arkansas Constituti­on, in order to vote, Arkansans need only be age 18 or older, U.S. citizens, Arkansas residents and properly registered to vote. The identifica­tion requiremen­t was tantamount to a fifth qualificat­ion, according to the court’s majority opinion.

In a concurring opinion, Justice Courtney Goodson said the Legislatur­e’s power to regulate elections stems from Amendment 51, Section 19, of the constituti­on.

Amendment 51 authorizes

lawmakers to amend voter registrati­on requiremen­ts if twothirds of both houses of the General Assembly approve.

In this year’s session, Rep. Mark Lowery, R-Maumelle, won House approval of his voter ID bill — House Bill 1047 — in a 74-21 vote. His bill has yet to obtain the minimum 24 votes needed in the 35-member Senate. The Senate voted 20-8 on the bill Monday.

Lowery has suggested that his bill could survive a court challenge with the approval of at least two-thirds of the House and Senate.

The Legislatur­e already has referred to voters in the 2018 general election the latest version of a proposed constituti­onal amendment that would limit certain damage awards in civil lawsuits and attorneys’ contingenc­y fees, and allow the Legislatur­e to rewrite the state Supreme Court’s rules.

That measure is Senate Joint Resolution 8 by Sen. Missy Irvin, R-Mountain View.

The successful effort, backed by business and health care interests, comes on the heels of unsuccessf­ul efforts to persuade the Legislatur­e in 2013 and 2015 to refer similar proposals to voters. Over several years, the state Supreme Court ruled that parts of tort law changes enacted by the Legislatur­e in 2003 were unconstitu­tional, including a $1 million limit on punitive-damages awards.

An initiated amendment was offered in 2016, but in October, the Supreme Court declared that “critical” parts of the proposal were insufficie­ntly described in the ballot title. The court blocked the state from counting votes cast on the measure in last year’s general election.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L ?? Sen. Bryan King said Tuesday that the proposed voter-identifica­tion amendment “would allow more identifica­tion to be able to stop voter fraud,” adding that he believes in the integrity of the right to vote, but also in protecting the integrity of the...
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/STATON BREIDENTHA­L Sen. Bryan King said Tuesday that the proposed voter-identifica­tion amendment “would allow more identifica­tion to be able to stop voter fraud,” adding that he believes in the integrity of the right to vote, but also in protecting the integrity of the...

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