This is a guest post by Gabe Kravitz, an organizer working with Jewish Community Action to defeat two amendments that would cement exclusion into Minnesota’s constitution. Follow him on Twitter @gabekravitz
I grew up with an eye on Minnesota politics and spent summers interning at the state capitol watching the floor debates on TV; but on July 17th in Saint Paul I had a front row seat. The Minnesota Supreme court heard a challenge to a proposed constitutional amendment that would require valid, state-issued photo identification for voting in Minnesota, and I was courtside.
The room was abuzz and the Justices were beyond well-prepared. The lawyers on both sides had barely introduced their arguments when the storm of questions rained down from the bench and struck to the core of the issue. It was intimidating. At trial was whether the amendment question, as it is being put to the voters, is misleading.
The lawsuit, brought by the League of Women voters and a coalition including Jewish Community Action (where I am on staff as an organizer), was argued by Bill Pentalovich and a team from Maslon Edelman Borman & Brand. The last case that I heard Bill Pentalovich argue was a mock trial of Abraham held at Adath Jeshurun’s Shabbat Morning Program when I was a bar mitzvah student. Abe didn’t stand a chance.
To bring down photo ID, the team from Maslon argued that the discrepancy between the ballot question and the actual amendment is deceptive and should be struck from the ballot.
The short ballot question does not accurately reflect the drastic impact that the amendment will have on our voting system.
One in six Minnesota voters would likely be affected by this change, including the elderly, service members oversees and communities of color that have been historically excluded from voting. If passed, an entirely new system of provisional balloting would need to be enacted.
Our same-date voter registration system, the reason that Minnesota has the highest voter participation in the country, will be upended.
The cost to the state is estimated at millions of dollars up front, with more in the future, and it will likely lead to an increase in property taxes.
And most astonishing of all, we will not know exactly what we are voting on, as it has been left to the 2013 legislature to determine what a new system will look like. The language that voters will see on the ballot won’t reflect any of that. We won’t know what we are voting on.
Justice David Stras expressed his own confusion when reading the ballot language: The way that the legislature has posed it to voters (calling for merely “valid photo ID” without language of “state issued”) even had him wondering if his Jewish Community Center membership card with his picture on it would be an acceptable ID for voting. According to the amendment language and the law makers’ intention it won’t be, and so the language of the question is misleading. If the ballot question isn’t clear on what is “valid photo ID,” how can we vote on whether to require it?
The team of attorneys defending the ballot question argued that it is not “palpably” misleading and that it is the responsibility of the voters to know what they are voting on and not to be misled. The ruling will likely come down to whether or not the Supreme Court thinks it has the authority to strike this from the ballot.
If photo ID does make it to the voters (possible) and then is passed (also possible), our ability to affect the decisions that impact our lives will be undermined.
To find out how you and your grandparents in Menorah Plaza could be impacted if voter ID is enacted visit ourvoteourfuture.org, the unified campaign to defeat this unnecessary amendment and click here to pledge to vote NO.
(Photo: bicyclemark)
This articile misrepsents the ID requirement, the amendement states “Government Issued” not State Issued as indicated. Government issued includes such things as Passports and EVEN public school/university Photo id’s. the actual wording is as follows:
(b) All voters voting in person must present valid government-issued photographic identification before receiving a ballot. The state must issue photographic identification at no charge to an eligible voter who does not have a form of identification meeting the requirements of this section. A voter unable to present government-issued photographic identification must be permitted to submit a provisional ballot. A provisional ballot must only be counted if the voter certifies the provisional ballot in the manner provided by law.
Thank you for actually giving us the text of the amendment. I have been
Wondering about this issue for a while and why people are against the
Requirement. I’m not necessarily for it, but want to know more
On both sides.
Unfortunately, this article doesn’t help much regard. I know the writer means well , but he has managed to
Confuse the issue more due to an extremely poor and scattershot
Writing style. He needed to be clear about the language and issue to
Begin with, and then explain in detail why he has come to the
Conclusion he has. Articles on this issue that are poorly or hastily
Written do everyone a disservice. Note to TC Jewfolk: you should edit
These articles or ask people to re-write them until they are of
Better quality. Otherwise, it’s just more meaningless noise.
The issue is confusing D Brown. Well articulated or not, that is very much my point. We don’t know what a provisional ballot system would look like or what forms of ID may be considered valid. We do know that Photo ID requirements create hurdles for otherwise eligible voters.
I beg to differ. The article is well written and articulate. The article is very clear about the problems caused by the government-issued photo ID requirement. To recap straight from the article:
* 1 in 6 voters will be impacted, most particularly the elderly, overseas service members and community of color.
* The very popular same-day registration system that helps make MN one of the highest voter turnout states in the nation will be upended.
* If enacted, a whole new system of provisional balloting will need to be created, and we don’t even know what that system would look like.
* The new requirements will cost the state millions of dollars up front, with more to follow in the future.
I do think these points are clear and were well made. However, if you would like more information, please visit http://jewishcommunityaction.org/organize/PhotoID.htm, http://www.lwvmn.org/page.aspx?pid=1197 and http://www.lwvmn.org/page.aspx?pid=1123. There are extensive resources to learn more on these issues.
The more you read, the more you will realize this is not a simple issue at all, and that huge numbers of voters could be disenfranchised by this amendment.
The problem is that it says “valid government-issued.” Not just any government-issued, but only what’s considered “valid” within the language of the amendment, language that hasn’t been created yet and won’t be at the time of the vote. Many people think that passports and school IDs will not be included under the umbrella of validity. But we don’t know, and that’s the problem. We shouldn’t be asked to vote on maybes and probablys.
Gabe,
I appreciate the kind words. However, winning is relatively easy when your client is in the right.
I am taking the unusual step of writing now, while the case is still pending before the Court, because it is clear that some of the people posting comments in response to your article don’t understand why the the League of Women Voters, Common Cause, and Jewish Community Action, along with five individual Minnesota voters, petitioned the Supreme Court for relief. The problem we requested the court to resolve is caused by the ballot question which the legislature mandated be put to a vote of the people. The legislature did not mandate that the entire amendment be put on the ballot and voted upon either “yes” or “no;” instead, only the following question is to be presented to voters:
“Shall the Minnesota Constitution be amended to require all voters to present valid photo identification to vote and to require the state to provide free identification to eligible voters, effective July 1, 2013?
Yes …..
No ….. ”
There are at least two false statements in this question and at least two material omissions of fact. Here is what the bill proposing the amendment says:
An act proposing an amendment to the Minnesota Constitution, article VII, section 1; requiring voters to present photographic identification; providing photographic identification to voters at no charge; requiring substantially equivalent verification standards for all voters; allowing provisional balloting for voters unable to present photographic identification.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Section 1. CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT PROPOSED.
An amendment to the Minnesota Constitution is proposed to the people. If the amendment is adopted, article VII, section 1, will read:
Section 1. (a) Every person 18 years of age or more who has been a citizen of the United States for three months and who has resided in the precinct for 30 days next preceding an election shall be entitled to vote in that precinct. The place of voting by one otherwise qualified who has changed his residence within 30 days preceding the election shall be prescribed by law. The following persons shall not be entitled or permitted to vote at any election in this state: A person not meeting the above requirements; a person who has been convicted of treason or felony, unless restored to civil rights; a person under guardianship, or a person who is insane or not mentally competent.
(b) All voters voting in person must present valid government-issued photographic identification before receiving a ballot. The state must issue photographic identification at no charge to an eligible voter who does not have a form of identification meeting the requirements of this section. A voter unable to present government-issued photographic identification must be permitted to submit a provisional ballot. A provisional ballot must only be counted if the voter certifies the provisional ballot in the manner provided by law.
(c) All voters, including those not voting in person, must be subject to substantially equivalent identity and eligibility verification prior to a ballot being cast or counted.
Sec. 2. SUBMISSION TO VOTERS.
(a) The proposed amendment must be submitted to the people at the 2012 general election. If approved, the amendment is effective July 1, 2013, for all voting at elections scheduled to be conducted November 5, 2013, and thereafter. The question submitted must be: “Shall the Minnesota Constitution be amended to require all voters to present valid photo identification to vote and to require the state to provide free identification to eligible voters, effective July 1, 2013?
Yes
…..
No ….. ”
(b) The title required under Minnesota Statutes, section 204D.15, subdivision 1, for the question submitted to the people under paragraph (a) shall be: “Photo Identification Required for Voting.”
The first false statement in the ballot question is that the amendment requires “all voters” to present photo identification. It doesn’t. It permits the legislature to adopt a scheme of “substantially equivalent” identification for people not voting in person to be implemented at its discretion.
The second false statement in the ballot question is that the question states that free photo identification will be presented to all “eligible voters.” That implies that any voter can get such a free photo identification. But that is not what the amendment says. It says the free identification may only be provided to any “eligible voter who does not have a form of identification meeting the requirements of this section.”
The first material omission in the ballot question is the failure to state that the amendment permits the legislature adopt a scheme of “substantially equivalent identity and eligibility verification.”
The second material omission, and by far the most serious, is the failure of the ballot question to disclose that the amendment requires implementation of provisional balloting in Minnesota. Minnesota does not currently have provisional balloting because Minnesota currently permits election day voter registration. Under the federal Help America Vote Act (“HAVA”), any state that does not have election day voter registration is required to implement a provisional balloting system; the details of that system would, under the proposed amendment, be left up to future legislatures. Provisional voting is addressed in the proposed amendment because the practical effect of the amendment if adopted would be to end election day registration in Minnesota — something that cannot be discerned from either the ballot question or the proposed amendment itself.
The people of Minnesota have a right to be dealt with honestly by the legislature, and the legislature owes the people of Minnesota a duty to fairly and honestly disclose to them, before they vote to change their constitution, what they are voting to change. The ballot question mandated by the legislature does not fairly and honestly do that, and that is why three of the most significant non-partisan organizations operating in this state which focus on issues relating to democracy, have asked the Supreme Court to strike down the legislature’s proposed ballot question.
I hope that this clarifies and informs the situation for those who have a genuine interest in what the League of Women Voters and my other clients are trying to accomplish on behalf of the people of this state.
Mr. Pentelovitch,
Thank you for the clarification.
It has been my feel all along that the issue here is not the voter ID, but rather an incomplete, very poorly written and improperly (falsely) presented amendment proposal that references the yet undetermined and unimplemented legal frameworks.
While I do not view voter ID as something negative, voting for an incomplete and misrepresented amendment is definitely a no-no in my book.
“This is a guest post by Gabe Kravitz, an organizer working with Jewish Community Action to defeat two amendments that would cement exclusion into Minnesota’s constitution. ”
Jewish Community Action is a leftist group that does not want people to be positively identified when voting and they are promoting “same sex marriage”, a concept alien and antithetical to normative Judaism.
Yes. Absolutely. Most definitely.
And my father was refused promotions and work opportunities in FSU because he is Jewish. Although he was told that he was not a bad person, even though he was a Jew.
You know, just sometimes, someone who is leftist is not necessarily a bad person, and can present good arguments.
And what is a definition of normative Judaism? Peyos, beaver top hats, black garb, tzitzit, and Glatt Kosher, mandated by Rabbi Whats-his-name Ben His-Father but absolutely not Rabbi Not-That-Guy! Ben His-Father?
By the way, last I heard, normative Judaism was not too hot about non-Kosher Internet either… They did mention that at that anti-internet meeting at Yankee stadium in Brooklyn that they broadcast all over on Kosher Internet.
Incidentally, the opposition to marriage amendment stems more from separation of church and state than from any other argument. Or, possibly from a saying by pastor Martin Niemöller, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_they_came%E2%80%A6
I absolutely LOVE your avatar, BTW. 😎 (hint, hint). LOL
I would argue that normative Judaism is the one with the most followers, which, in the US, would be Reform. And Reform recognizes a marriage between people of the same gender.
However, as Dmitry rightly points out, whether or not a person is leftist or supports same-gender marriage has nothing to do with whether that person has put forth a valid argument in regard to voting rights.
Shabbat shalom, everyone!
Gut Shabbos.
P.S. Wikipedia is evil.
Wrong on both counts. Under existing Minnesota law, voters have to be positively identified when registering and they have to sign an oath to vote which is a felony to falsify. If there were any amount of voter fraud today, it could and would be prosecuted. There simply isn’t any. As far as allowing same-gender couples, the thinking differs within and among various religions, however without exception that I’m aware of every Conservative and Reform congregation in Minnesota is opposed to the proposed amendment.
I neglected to mention that for same-day registration, which is highly popular in Minnesota, the voter has to be positively identified to register and vote that day. The only difference is they are not today required to show a “valid” government-issued photo ID. No one really knows what that means, and the state’s attorney conceded to the Supreme Court at argument that an ID issued by a state university would not be valid. Why not, and says who? Anyone wanting to fraudulently vote could easily produce a fraudulent photo ID. Any idea how many young people have fake driver’s licenses in order to drink?
Mr. Eisenberg wrote:
“There simply isn’t any.”
Even if your assertion were true, requiring government issued photo ID to vote will *prevent* electoral fraud.
“…however without exception that I’m aware of every Conservative and Reform congregation in Minnesota is opposed to the proposed [Marriage] amendment.
Your point being…what?
Susan Barnes wrote:
“I would argue that normative Judaism is the one with the most followers, which, in the US, would be Reform. And Reform recognizes a marriage between people of the same gender.”
If Reform also declared – G-d forbid – that it was permissible to bow down before idols, would that be normative Judaism according to your standard?
The final authority in this matter is Torah which is the basis for normative Judaism. “Same sex marriage” is a contradiction, has never existed in Judaism, and does not exist in Judaism.
“If Reform also declared – G-d forbid – that it was permissible to bow down before idols, would that be normative Judaism according to your standard?”
“If the Orthodox movement also declared – G-d forbid – that it was permissible to bow down before idols, would that be normative Judaism according to your standard?”
The Torah says nothing about same-gender marriage. Nothing. It does mention a man lying with a man as he would with a woman, and there are many ways to interpret that.
And anyone who says that “traditional” marriage according to the Torah is one man and one woman completely ignores how common it is in the Torah for men to have more than one wife at the same time.
Sorry, it looks like part of my comment was missing. What I was saying in the beginning is the statement about idols is a complete red herring. It is something no Jewish movement would do.
Torah in which tzaddik’s interpretation?
As far as I know, the only people who live strictly by the word of Torah are Karaites. Everyone else relies on a large volume of interpretive literature and the oral law, both of which evolved over time. Remember, even Maimonides was once considered a heretic, and so was Baal Shem Tov.
Laws are adjusted as culture evolves. Otherwise you would still be require to build a fence all around the roof of your house.
Do you think that there is a person in the world who follows all 613 commandments?
Well, there isn’t any voter fraud around these parts, and even if there were: (1) photo IDs won’t stop it, because — as I already stated — fake photo IDs are easy to obtain on the open market; and (2) the massive numbers of people disenfranchised by that requirement far outweigh any benefits on the “fraud” front.
As Judge Niess wrote in blocking the Wisconsin voter ID law, “where it exists, voter fraud corrupts elections and undermines our form of government,” however “voter fraud is no more poisonous to our democracy than voter suppression. Indeed, they are two heads on the same monster.” (http://www.prwatch.org/news/2012/03/11350/second-judge-strikes-down-wis-alec-inspired-voter-id-law)
As far as normative Judaism, my comment was self-explanatory and your questioning of it is disingenuous. You can accuse a dozen or so congregations and their rabbis of violating Jewish law if you wish, but it just might be you who has it wrong. Those who actually wish to learn more can go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homosexuality_and_Conservative_Judaism
Mr. Eisenberg wrote:
Well, there isn’t any voter fraud around these parts…
To reiterate: Even if your assertion were true, requiring government issued photo ID to vote will *prevent* electoral fraud. Suppression of illegal voting and electoral fraud protects the integrity of our State and our Republic.
Wikipedia is edited by anonymous persons and prone to inaccuracies., and quoting it as a sole source for an argument destroys credibility.
The final authority in this matter is Torah which is the basis for normative Judaism. “Same sex marriage” is a contradiction, has never existed in Judaism, and does not exist in Judaism.
I will ask you, Mr. Eisenberg, the same question I asked Miss Barnes:
If Reform or Conservative Judaism – also declared – G-d forbid – that it was permissible to bow down before idols, would that be normative Judaism according to your standard?
While one has to be cautious reading Wikipedia, in an independent study published in the journal Nature, Wikipedia was found to be as accurate as the benchmark Encyclopedia Britannica. http://news.cnet.com/2100-1038_3-5997332.html
However, if you want to go back to original source material, you can certainly study up on the site http://huc.edu/ijso/PoliciesResponsa/
There, you will find:
BE IT RESOLVED, that the Central Conference of American Rabbis support the right of gay and lesbian couples to share fully and equally in the rights of civil marriage, and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the CCAR oppose governmental efforts to ban gay and lesbian marriage.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that this is a matter of civil law, and is separate from the question of rabbinic officiation at such marriages.
(March 1996)
and
WE DO HEREBY RESOLVE, that the relationship of a Jewish, same gender couple is worthy of affirmation through appropriate Jewish ritual, and
FURTHER RESOLVED, that we recognize the diversity of opinions within our ranks on this issue. We support the decision of those who choose to officiate at rituals of union for same-gender couples, and we support the decision of those who do not, and
FURTHER RESOLVED, that we call upon the CCAR to support all colleagues in their choices in this matter, and
FURTHER RESOLVED, that we also call upon the CCAR to develop both educational and liturgical resources in this area.
(March 2000)
and many other source documents, although a number of the links are unfortunately broken.
The views of the Minnesota Rabbinical Association, reflecting the work of 35 rabbis from 15 synagogues and Jewish institutions representing the majority of Jews in Minnesota can be found here: http://bit.ly/RL1b3F
Please don’t try to impose your religious views on others. You are certainly entitled to them, but not to force them on others.
And please don’t waste our time on ridiculous hypotheticals. o suggest that our rabbinate would endorse idol worship is an insult to them, and you should be ashamed of yourself. I obviously have much more respect for our distinguished rabbinical clergy than you do.
Wikipedia is a website that is edited by overwhelmingly anonymous editors, each with their own agendas, who form alliances to further specific political and social agendas. It is a singularly unreliable source because content changes dynamically.
I am well aware of the responsa from Reform. It does not comply with Torah.
Mr. Eisenberg wrote:
“Please don’t try to impose your religious views on others. You are certainly entitled to them, but not to force them on others.”
Pot. Kettle. Black.
“And please don’t waste our time on ridiculous hypotheticals.”
A sect of Judaism that asserts two men, who engage in behavior considered to be an abomination (Vayikra 18:22), should be accepted as “married” in Judaism cannot possibly be offended when asked if they would also accept idol worship, another abomination (Shemot 20:3-5, Devarim 5:7-9, Shemot 23:13, Vayikra 19:4, Devarim 7:25-26; 17:2- 5).
Since I asked *you* the question, and received no answer, I’ll ask it again:
If Reform or Conservative Judaism declared that it was (G-d forbid) permissible to bow down before idols, would that be normative Judaism according to your standard?
* typo: – To suggest…
I stand with the interpretation of the 35 rabbis, not with your narrow views.
With assimilation, a declining birth rate, the acceptance of “unions” that can never reproduce, it’s just a matter of time until the Reform, Conservative, and Reconstructionist movements disappear into history.
Just like the hellenists before them.
B”H
OK, Neal, if you say so.
Well, either way, there appears to be a movement in the right direction here:
http://www.minnpost.com/political-agenda/2012/08/federal-judge-denies-lawsuit-effort-change-minnesota%E2%80%99s-voting-procedures
Minnesota’s same day registration is not unconstitutional.
So?