by Walter E. Williams
Voter ID laws have been challenged because liberal Democrats deem them
racist. I guess that’s because they see blacks as being incapable of
acquiring some kind of government-issued identification. Interesting
enough is the fact that I’ve never heard of a challenge to other ID
requirements as racist, such as those: to board a plane, open a charge
account, have lab work done or cash a welfare check. Since liberal
Democrats only challenge legal procedures to promote ballot-box
integrity, the conclusion one reaches is that they are for vote fraud
prevalent in many Democrat-controlled cities.
There is another area where the attack on ballot-box integrity goes
completely unappreciated. We can examine this attack by looking at the
laws governing census taking. As required by law, the U.S. Census Bureau
is supposed to count all persons in the U.S. Those to be counted
include citizens, legal immigrants and non-citizen long-term visitors.
The law also requires that illegal immigrants be a part of the decennial
census. The estimated number of illegal immigrants ranges widely from
12 million to 30 million. Official estimates put the actual number
closer to 12 million.
Both citizens and non-citizens are included in the census and thus
affect apportionment counts. Counting illegals in the census undermines
one of the fundamental principles of representative democracy — namely,
that every citizen-voter has an equal voice. Through the decennial
census-based process of apportionment, states with large numbers of
illegal immigrants, such as California and Texas, unconstitutionally
gain additional members in the U.S. House of Representatives thereby
robbing the citizen-voters in other states of their rightful
representation.
Hans von Spakovsky, a Heritage Foundation scholar and former member
of the Federal Election Commission, has written an article, “How
Noncitizens Can Swing Elections: Without Even Voting Illegally.” He
points to the fact that 12 million illegal aliens, plus other aliens who
are here legally but are not citizens and have no right to vote,
distort representation in the House. Spakovsky cites studies by Leonard
Steinhorn of American University, scholars at Texas A&M University
and the Center for Immigration Studies. Steinhorn’s study lists 10
states that are each short one congressional seat that they would have
had if apportionment were based on U.S. citizen population: Indiana,
Iowa, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, North Carolina, Ohio,
Oklahoma and Pennsylvania.
On the other hand, states with large numbers of illegal aliens and other
non-citizens have congressional seats they would not have had. They
are: California (five seats), Florida (one seat), New York (one seat),
Texas (two seats) and Washington state (one seat). Moreover, the
inflated population count resulting from the inclusion of illegal
immigrants and other non-citizens increases the number of votes some
states get in the Electoral College system, affecting the actual process
of electing the president of the United States.
There is a strong argument for counting non-citizens, whether they are
here legally or illegally. An accurate population count is important for
a number of public policy reasons as well as national security — we
should know who is in our country. But as professor Mark Rozell, acting
dean of the School of Policy, Government, and International Affairs at
George Mason University, and Paul Goldman, a weekly columnist for the
Washington Post, say in their Politico article, there is no “persuasive
reason to allow the presence of illegal immigrants, unlawfully in the
country, or noncitizens generally, to play such a crucial role in
picking a president.”
Hans von Spakovsky concludes his article saying, “It is a felony under
federal law for a noncitizen to vote in our elections because voting is a
right given only to American citizens. It is a precious right that must
be earned by becoming a citizen. Giving aliens, particularly those
whose first act was to break our laws to illegally enter the country,
political power in Congress and allowing them to help choose our
president strike at the very heart of our republic and what it means to
be an American.”
Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University.
Source:
Destroying Your Vote | John Hawkins' Right Wing News
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