True and False Still Partisan
The headline identifies how the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch leans:
Illinois lawmakers pass bill that could add voters:
The Democrats who control the Illinois Legislature approved a measure Saturday that could spur higher voter registration and turnout - a move that Republicans angrily asserted was designed to stack the deck in future elections.
...
The voting registration bill, sent to Gov. Rod Blagojevich, a Democrat, on a House vote, would require that information about registering to vote be put in college registration documents that incoming college students receive. It would also allow online voter registration and would allow time off work in some circumstances to vote.
The measure, sponsored by Democrats, picked at a traditionally partisan sore spot. Efforts to increase voting registration are generally believed to help Democrats more than Republicans, because many of those who don't currently vote are young, poor or members of a minority group. Republicans historically have claimed that such measures expand the opportunities for voter fraud.
Of course, those of us steeped in logic understand this is a false dilemma, as it will undoubtedly do both. It will add a small number of actual voters to the rolls who will participate in the republican democracy (who will undoubtedly vote Democrat, as do most voters who need to be coaxed out of their stupors into voting booths), but it will also allow for greater and easier fraud (who also will undoubtedly vote Democrat, as do most dead people, dogs, children, and clones).
So the Republicans want to disenfranchise the lazy, the apathetic, and the incompetent?
Well, some do. Those who favor a meritocracy.