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Ballot initiative could require Massachusetts voters to show identification

Currently, voters in Massachusetts do not have to provide identification.

Published: September 6, 2021 4:32pm

Updated: September 6, 2021 11:02pm

(The Center Square) -

The Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office last week announced 16 proposed laws and one constitutional amendment that could appear on ballots statewide in 2022, including one that would require voters to show identification at polling places.

Currently, voters in Massachusetts do not have to provide identification, according to the Secretary of State website. They just have to give their address.

Proponents of the initiative now have to acquire 80,239 signatures from registered voters by Dec. 1, which will then be sent to the Legislature to be enacted by May 4, 2022. If the Legislature doesn’t act on the proposal, proponents would have to gather an additional 13,374 signatures from registered voters by July 6, 2022.

Tatyana Semyrog, who is spearheading the initiative, said election integrity is at the center of the initiative.

“My political reason for this is I ran for state representative in 2020 and the way the election was conducted – a lot of people still have questions about it,” Semyrog said of the Massachusetts state election. “The election integrity issue is important to everyone I speak to whether they are Republican or Democrat.

“No voter identification makes people think there was fraud," Semyrog added. "I am not claiming that happened. A lot of people don’t have the confidence that it was a fair election.”

If the initiative passes, voters would have to show United States government, state or tribal authority identification at the polls in order to vote. If voters can’t show identification, under the proposed regulation, they would be permitted to vote if they execute an affidavit attesting to their identity and residence.

Currently, Massachusetts asks for identification at polling places for first-time voters in a federal election, an inactive voter, casting a provisional or challenged ballot or the poll worker has reasonable suspicion that leads them to request identification, according to the secretary of state website.

Acceptable identification, the website said, includes a driver’s license, state-issued ID card, recent utility bill, rent receipt, lease, a copy of a voter registration affidavit or any other printed identification which provides the voter’s name and address.

Semyrog said organization and training individuals to acquire the signatures is underway.

“We have overwhelming support on both the left and the right as far as voters,” Semyrog said. “I am surprised. I did not suspect it to garner this much enthusiasm. We have been able to organize and mobilize this past month.”

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