Veteran Gil Paar holds his Department of Veterans Affairs identification card at his home in Mount Pleasant, near Racine, Wis., on Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2012. Paar tried to use the card to vote Tuesday, the first election that voters were required to show identifiication, but was told by election officials that the card was not acceptable because it has no signature. He was asked to show his driver's license, but refused, and did not vote. Paar said, "I gave them four years of my life, why shouldn't I be able to use my vet's card?" (AP Photo/Journal Times, Gregory Shaver)Democrats ran into staunch Republican resistance Monday in their attempts to stop a Pennsylvania House bill to require all voters to show certain photo identification before their ballot could be counted.
The bill, which would give Pennsylvania one of the nation's toughest voter ID laws, was expected to pass Tuesday in the Republican-controlled House, the last step before it can go to the desk of Gov. Tom Corbett, who plans to sign it.
Democrats have fought the bill, bitterly denouncing it part of a wider GOP plot nationwide to suppress votes during a presidential election year by traditional Democratic constituents, such as the poor, disabled or elderly, who may not have ID or may have difficulty getting ID.
"I think it is a surreptitious attempt to suppress the Democratic vote, using tax dollars," said Rep. Greg Vitali, D-Delaware, told colleagues during debate Monday. "It is wrong, it is insidious." read more>>>
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