Mellsblue wrote:Puja wrote:Mellsblue wrote:
What are you basing this disenfranchising on? There’s no policy yet. I’ve just shown that my council will provide a free second piece of non-photography ID, via a home visit I believe, with the first being the polling card. How is that disenfranchising anybody?
In essence, my point is that some more hysterical parts of the media have decided it’s a Tory plot to disenfranchise people when the trials show that’s not the case and there’s no actually policy detail to base the hysteria on.
Over and out. Let’s enjoy the election coverage. We are all going to political hell.
Quite apart from the people who would struggle to acquire even free ID provided with a home visit because of being trans, homeless, couch-surfing, living on a boat, mental health issues meaning they're not able to have someone come for a home visit, students registered to vote at uni/at home but not being physically present at the time, etc, I think we can all agree that having two pieces of ID is more difficult than not having two pieces of ID, which means that some people who would vote without ID will not vote with ID. I don't get a policy that reduces voter turnout in order to solve a practically non-existent problem.
But you raise a good point - let's all stop arguing and "enjoy" the election coverage.
Puja
You need to provide an address to register in the first place. All of those bar, possibly, the students are a non-issue, and sure there are ways round that. If you’ve the acumen and the ability to register to vote, you’ve the ability and acumen to get your free second form of ID.
Also, according to the BBC:
‘In 2017, the year of the last general election, there were 336 reported cases of electoral fraud, most of which resulted in no action being taken.
One report of electoral fraud resulted in a conviction and eight resulted in police cautions.’ Looks like more of a problem than alluded to.
You need to provide an address to register, but it's not necessarily one to which you can get a free second form of ID. The address can be "where you would be living if it were not for your current situation or an address where you have lived in the past." These are edge cases, obviously, which don't detract from my point that it's putting an extra hurdle between people and voting and I don't get why you would want to do that.
A quick google says that, of those 336 reported cases of electoral fraud in 2017, 28 were suspicions of personation (pretending to be someone else to vote), which resulted in only one charge and conviction (which was someone attempting to help a friend who couldn't get to the polling station, apparently). The rest were postal vote, proxy vote, or student double-registering shenanigans.
Anyway, we're all doomed, as Boris Johnson's now got a majority so large that he can do whatever the hell he likes, so it's kind of a moot point.
Puja