Punisher wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 2:43 pm
1. I wasn't aware that anyplace allowed non-citizens to vote and I'm pretty sure that I'm against that happing. Non citizen shouldn't be able to vote. Period. If your not a citizen you shouldn't be able to influence anything in the country.
2. I do understand where you guts are coming from and are worried about the possibility of interpretation issues but as gilraen mentioned ot is happing elsewhere even in blue states. So maybe, just maybe, it's intended to make it clearer. Citizen. Period. No modifiers. Let's bring citizens and naturalized citizen together because ultimately we are all citizens.
Maybe it's the optometrist in me that's thinks that not everything the Republicans do has an evil motive. Sure a lit may be but maybe not evetytjing.
Perhaps instead of speculating why don't we
go to the news and see what the language actually does state, where this is happening, and why now?
from the article wrote:
No state constitution in the U.S. allows noncitizens to vote. And while certain cities and municipalities in three states, as well as Washington, D.C., have allowed noncitizens to vote in some local elections, none are located in the eight states with these ballot measures.
So there is already no question that non-citizens don't have a right to vite other than 3 states and Washington D.C. for some local elections.
But why?
“These proposed constitutional amendments are aimed really at two things: preventing local governments in those states from allowing non-U.S. citizens to vote in local elections, and advancing this false narrative that non-U.S. citizens are somehow participating in U.S. elections in large numbers, which is totally unsupported by any evidence or facts,” said Jonathan Diaz, the director of voting advocacy at the nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center.
Now, the knee-jerk reaction would be "but why would you let non-US citizens vote in any local election? School board, or local rep or otherwise? What would be the point of that?
Here's one use case:
District 9 is populated by mostly immigrants from Sexystan. They don't speak English very well, and horror of horrors, they don't look white at all. Bob Asshat (R) is running for the school board representing District 9. Mr. Asshat doesn't care for the Sexystan immigrants so he's not going to advocate for them at all. He's got a pretty safe bet at winning, because the US citizens that live in District 9 are the shopkeepers and business people that prey on the Sexystan living situation and they all lean Republican. So Mr. Asshat wins, doesn't do jack for the schools in District 9, and people there are pretty miserable about it, but what can you do? It's not like the Sexystanians can move elsewhere.
Anyway, moving on:
The article mentions that the lawmakers pushing the bill merely clarify that only citizens can vote, even though existing language already states that, and they acknowledge that "It’s not like it’s happening everywhere and it must be stopped immediately. But preemption is not a bad thing.”
But the message that these bills send is this:
“They play on peoples’ fears and misconceptions about the electoral process and who is participating in elections to stoke this kind of anxiety about whether our elections can be trusted,” said Diaz. “When the average person sees something like this on their ballot, I think it would be a reasonable reaction to think, ‘Oh, my God, they were allowed to vote before? Have we been allowing non-U.S. citizens to vote all this time?’ And of course we haven’t — it is already illegal.”
In other words they merely serve to stoke the fears of the Joe and Jill Billy Bob who may think (wrongly) that somehow illegals were allowed to vote in the election. Thereby making it easier to enable future virtue signaling (see previous use case where Jill Billy Bob intimidates Sexystan immigrant, now naturalized US Citizen).
Not to mention, the timing of it is such that the GOP, fearing that Trump may in fact lose, is setting up the conditions for a Hail Mary endgame in case of a loss:
“Whether or not it’s true, which it isn’t,” Diaz said of widespread noncitizen voting, the presence of these ballot measures risks “creating doubt in the mind of the public and undermines the electoral system and possibly makes it easier for the public to swallow attempts to overturn the results if [Trump] loses.”
Which is a use case I admit I didn't think of, but is genius. So two things going for it: 1. It opens the door for voter intimidation in the future and 2. It opens the door for a "legitimate uprising" and calls of "immigrants stole the vote!" if Trump loses.