@SteelThrill@BexterZ@CBSNews What about married women equates to voter suppression? Congress sets the minimum citizenship standards and it's up the individual states to make their voter registration work (e.g. reconciling marriage licenses). Any power not delegated to the federal govt is retained by states.
@SteelThrill@BexterZ@CBSNews I'm familiar enough and I'm challenging that there is no voter suppression. It's upon you to present why you think there is.
@SteelThrill@BexterZ@CBSNews Lol voter suppression how? Would making voter registration mandatory under threat of financial or criminal penalty fix that? Like the annual Obamacare tax for not having proof of health insurance? Or a felony for failure register for selective service?
@SteelThrill@BexterZ@CBSNews Not voter suppression. Congress can set the minimum standards in line with the elections clause and supremacy clause of the constitution. Anything not addressed by Congress is delegated to the states.
@coneal110@BexterZ@CBSNews Not voter suppression. Congress can set the minimum standards in line with the elections clause and supremacy clause of the constitution. Anything not addressed by Congress is delegated to the states.
@Jen22Colorado@SC_First_@BexterZ@CBSNews It's not voter suppression... but that can be easily fixed by mandating voter registration for eligible voters under the threat of penalties. Already precedent like a tax under ACA's shared responsibility or criminal liability for failing to register for selective service.
@BuddhaBodbyJake@libsoftiktok@GOP Nothing is stopping the states from setting up their own service to deliver maip-in ballots to voters. There are other private parcel services like UPS and FedEx.
@MSialia@ClashCoach1@Osint613 That's easy to fix and we already have precedent. Every eligible voter must register with proof of citizenship or 1) be subject to a tax like the Affordable Care Act w/o proof of insurance, or 2) subject to criminal penalty like failing to register for selective service.
π¨ Judge Sparkle Sooknanan has struck down the Trump administration's expanded SAVE voter-verification system, ruling that federal agencies unlawfully created a centralized database containing Social Security and citizenship data to facilitate mass voter verification.