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Montana legislator asserts voter fraud in pushing ID law

by Bobby Caina Calvan
| February 9, 2017 6:21 PM

HELENA, Mont. (AP) — A Montana legislator seeking to toughen the state's voter ID law alleged Thursday that voter fraud is occurring at polling places across the state, as opponents sought to kill the bill as an unnecessary barrier to voting.
Republican Rep. Derek Skees of Kalispell offered no specific proof of his assertions during a legislative committee hearing. The committee is considering his bill to require voters to present photo identification on Election Day.
President Donald Trump has vowed to probe what he alleges was massive voter fraud during the November elections. He claims millions of people voted illegally, although experts are doubtful.
Members of the State Administration Committee doubted the allegations Skees made about voter fraud in Montana.
"All because we have a government that says there is no voter fraud, that doesn't necessarily make it true," Skees said. "Once voter fraud occurs, it's difficult to prove."
A representative from the Secretary of State's Office was not present during the hearing, and a spokesperson for the office was not immediately available to comment.
Former Secretary of State Linda McCulloch said she never found "a valid case of voter fraud" in her eight years of overseeing the state's elections. "Attempts to limit voter registration aren't about voter fraud as some would claim," she said. "It's about using scare tactics to limit a voter's access to their ballot. It's shameful."
Jordan Thompson, an attorney with the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, called the proposal at attempt to suppress votes.
"The bill he's presenting comes from a place of privilege, where you just assume that everybody has an ID, can get an ID or should have an ID. Native communities don't necessarily come from that same perspective," Thompson said.
The bill would require voters to present a picture ID — such as a driver's license, Montana state photo identification card, passport or a concealed weapons permit — at polling places or when applying for an absentee ballot.
Skees said his law was meant to stop people from "gaming the system."
The committee did not take immediate action on the proposal.