RE: Voter ID Surprise, by Marc Comtois
Election Reform
8:00 AM, 07/ 7/11
RE: Voter ID Surprise, by Marc Comtois
Election Reform
8:00 AM, 07/ 7/11
Voter ID Surprise, by Justin Katz
Election Reform
6:32 AM, 07/ 7/11
Gimme that Old-Tyme Constitutionalism!, by Carroll Andrew Morse
General Assembly
3:00 PM, 07/ 6/11
Rhode Island: The Business Underdog (of our own making), by Marc Comtois
Rhode Island Economy
11:00 AM, 07/ 6/11
Different Is Not Equivalent, by Justin Katz
Marriage & Family
6:16 AM, 07/ 6/11
Counterfactual alert: A Conservative Case for Raising Taxes?, by Marc Comtois
Taxation
5:00 PM, 07/ 5/11
Providence used as example of how "Compensation Monster [is] Devouring Cities", by Marc Comtois
Providence
3:00 PM, 07/ 5/11
Looking for One Time Fixes: Any Indian Temples in RI?, by Marc Comtois
On a Lighter Note...
3:00 PM, 07/ 5/11
Stimulus = $278,000 per job, by Marc Comtois
National Politics
12:00 PM, 07/ 5/11
July 7, 2011
RE: Voter ID Surprise
Justin wonders if there's a catch with the ease with which voter ID sailed through the legislature and the Governor's inbox. Here's a theory for you: RI GOP Chair Ken McKay was in for WHJJ's Helen Glover this morning and had on someone from GOLOCALProv touting their story about the disparity between census data and voter rolls in traditional Rhode Island "vacation" communities. They didn't go over specific numbers, but here they are:
A comparison of the new U.S. Census data with public voter registration records revealed significant discrepancies in at least four communities in 2010:Admitting he was cynical, McKay tied Voter ID into it and wondered if GOLOCAL was tipped off to the disparity by someone looking to suppress conservative-leaning, shoreline property owning (and property-tax paying) out-of-staters from voting in Rhode Island. As McKay pointed out, RISC started as the Rhode Island SHORELINE Coalition (since renamed the RI STATEWIDE Coalition) and advocated for voting rights for those who owned property in Rhode Island. He also prompted the GOLOCAL editor to give RISC a call for their thoughts.■ Block Island had 888 year-round residents aged 18 years and older recorded in the Census while 1,468 people were registered to vote—a difference of 65 percent.
■ Jamestown had 362 more registered voters than residents.
■ Little Compton had 236 more voters than residents.
■ Westerly had 2,289 more voters than residents—a discrepancy of more than 15 percent. (See below chart for the complete breakdown.)