Clergy rally in Philly against voter ID law

The Rev. William B. Moore (left) of the Tenth Memorial Baptist Church talks about a member of his congregation who may not be able to vote on Election Day. DAVID MAIALETTI / staff photographer
A number of Philadelphia-area clergy came together Sunday night to speak out against Pennsylvania’s controversial new voter-ID law, saying it will prevent thousands from casting their ballots.
The Rev. William B. Moore of the Tenth Memorial Baptist Church in North Philadelphia said an 80-year-old parishioner of his is one of them. She was born in a South Carolina home, delivered by a midwife and never had a birth certificate. Without that, she can’t get a photo ID in Pennsylvania, even though she has a Social Security card and voted in prior elections, he said.
“She told me, ‘I’ve been living for 80 years and I can’t seem to prove it,’ ” he said.
Moore was one of several clergy members and community leaders who voiced their concerns about the 5-month-old law at the Bright Hope Baptist Church at 12th Street and Cecil B. Moore Avenue in North Philadelphia.
“The question is why do we need the law?” asked Bright Hope’s senior pastor, Kevin Johnson.
Proponents of the law say it is necessary to combat voter fraud. But opponents argue that actual cases of fraud are practically non-existent and that the move is a smokescreen to restrict hundreds of thousands of likely Democratic voters, particularly minorities, the poor, the uneducated and the elderly, from casting their ballots.
“It’s a way to discourage voters and suppress voters,” Johnson said. The problem is greater “in the African-American and Hispanic communities,” he said.
The most common form of photo ID is a state-issued driver’s license. PennDOT recently released a list of 759,000 voters who may not have PennDOT IDs and another list of 906,000 with expired IDs that wouldn’t be accepted at polling places in November.
Philadelphia City Commissioner Stephanie Singer said it is estimated that about 9.2 percent of Pennsylvania residents and 18 percent in Philadelphia don’t have a photo ID. [More]
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5 Comments
Why doesn’t the clergy get involved in helping people to get the proper ID’s. To say voter fraud isn’t an issue doesn’t hold water. I wish ALL states had this law!
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Philadelphia has more registered voters than city residents. Thanks to the very fair and just voter I.d. Law, those deceased voters can now finally rest in peace.
This is not controversial. It shows a concern for the franchise of Voting and the responsibility of it’s citizens. Without an ID hundreds of thousands of illegals and non citizens can Vote in a country they do not belong to. I feel sorry for the 80 year old without an ID. The idea that she can’t get a photo ID is pretty ridiculous in our litigious society.
This is just another “woe is me” article. What ever happend to personal responsibility? These folks seem to have no problem getting to the casinos all right.