Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

House GOP leadership announces discharge resolution for voter ID

- By Christen Smith

HARRISBURG — A new plan set in motion this week could shake loose a constituti­onal amendment to enact universal photograph identifica­tion to vote.

House Republican leadership said letting the bill languish in committee ignores the popularity of the policy among voters, especially those anxious about election security.

“There are stronger rules in place for signing out a Curious George book for kids than there is for voting,” said Rep. Brad Roae, R-Meadville. “That seems really backwards.”

That’s why Mr. Roae and other leaders are drafting a discharge resolution this week to force the bill out of the State Government Committee and onto the House floor for considerat­ion. It’s a parliament­ary maneuver that requires 25 signatures from lawmakers in each party to be successful.

That’s a tall order given Democrats’ historical opposition. Republican lawmakers said they’re optimistic anyway since members have crossed the aisle before to support it.

The plan in question, House Bill 891, reincarnat­es prior legislatio­n that died in the lower chamber last year to ask residents if the state constituti­on should be amended to require voter ID at every election.

It’s been sitting in committee for nearly a year. House Democratic leadership controls the voting schedule and likely won’t be inspired to bring up the proposal anytime soon.

Beth Rementer, spokeswoma­n for House Speaker Joanna McClinton, D-Philadelph­ia, said the chamber voted on legislatio­n in October that would have, among other things, implemente­d universal voter ID.

Republican­s voted against it because it would have made sweeping changes — like moving the primary election date — without giving counties enough time to prepare. Ms. Rementer said it’s proof that the discharge resolution is a “political stunt.”

“The constituti­on grants rights,” Ms. Rementer told The Center Square. “It doesn’t and shouldn’t take away rights.”

Instead, Ms. McClinton has recently unveiled plans for legislatio­n to launch early in-person voting and same-day registrati­on.

Even a successful discharge resolution doesn’t guarantee the bill will make it through the chamber or overcome the other many parliament­ary hurdles required.

First, lawmakers must approve the bill in two consecutiv­e legislativ­e sessions — a two-year process, at minimum. The proposal is immune to the governor’s veto.

The bill then funnels to the Department of State and the Attorney’s General Office to advertise the amendment’s appearance on the general election ballot, as well as solidify the wording of the question that will be posed to voters. Failure to follow any of the steps sets the entire effort back to zero.

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