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Elections Georgia Election Code: Revise The Forms Of Identification That Are Acceptable In Order To Register And To Vote In This State; And For Other Purposes, Christopher M. Bracci Sep 2005

Elections Georgia Election Code: Revise The Forms Of Identification That Are Acceptable In Order To Register And To Vote In This State; And For Other Purposes, Christopher M. Bracci

Georgia State University Law Review

Section 59 of this Act, the only section with which this Peach Sheet is concerned, revises the acceptable forms of identification to register and to vote in the State of Georgia. As a result of this section, only the following forms of identification will be sufficient to register and vote in Georgia: (1) a valid Georgia driver's license that was properly issued by the appropriate state agency; (2) a valid identification card issued by a branch, department, agency, or entity of the State of Georgia, any other state, or the United States that is authorized by law to issue personal …


Restoring Reason And Civility To The Judicial Selection Process, Rodney A. Smolla Mar 2005

Restoring Reason And Civility To The Judicial Selection Process, Rodney A. Smolla

University of Richmond Law Review

No abstract provided.


Felon Disenfranchisement: Law, History, Policy, And Politics, George Brooks Jan 2005

Felon Disenfranchisement: Law, History, Policy, And Politics, George Brooks

Fordham Urban Law Journal

George W. Bush became the forty-third President of the United States when he won the state of Florida by 537 votes in the 2000 election. Because the election was so close, hotly-contested, and divisive, aspects of our electoral system long relegated to dusty books suddenly became topics of water cooler conversation and cocktail party chatter. Some Democrats speculate that if the nearly 600,000 felons in Florida had been allowed to vote, Al Gore would have been elected President. Felon disenfranchisement has thus become a cause celèbre among liberals. There are approximately four million felons who cannot vote nationwide. They are …


Could Terrorists Derail A Presidential Election?, Jerry H. Goldfeder Jan 2005

Could Terrorists Derail A Presidential Election?, Jerry H. Goldfeder

Fordham Urban Law Journal

The article begins by expressing surprise that there is no safeguard for regularly scheduled elections and that if an election would have to be cancelled or postponed it is unknown what would happen. It then discusses what happened to elections during 9/11/2001 and the lack of statutory guidance ensuing from there, and discusses how some states have addressed the problem of an affected election, and questions what would happen to the presidential election in the face of such events. It questions whether Congress should attempt to legislate for such an event and gives a suggestion for what can be done …