WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Kevin Cramer (R-ND) and Representative
Nancy Mace (R-SC-01) this week introduced the Vaccine Passport and Voter ID
Harmonization Act, bicameral legislation to require states with COVID-19
vaccine passport mandates to also have voter ID requirements if they want to
continue receiving election administration funds.
“It makes no sense for Democrats to adamantly oppose
commonsense Voter ID policies which protect the integrity of our
elections,” said Senator Cramer. “If they’re comfortable
making people show their private medical records to simply go to a restaurant,
they should be fine having people prove they are who they say they are before
they vote. Our legislation shines a light on their hypocrisy.”
“Showing an ID is something we must do in everyday life.
We need an ID when we get a job, cash our paychecks, rent an apartment, buy a
car, buy alcohol or even cold medicine. States who mandate vaccine passports
should be just as rigorous when it comes to something as important as
protecting the right to vote,” said Representative Mace. “I am
introducing legislation to require all states and local jurisdictions that
institute vaccine passports to also require voter identification in ALL federal
elections. It makes too much sense not to.”
Senator Cramer previously announced his intent to introduce this
legislation and recently joined Fox & Friends to discuss the issue. Learn more here.
While 20 states, including North Dakota, have
banned vaccine passports either through executive action or
legislation (and each of those states have voter ID laws in place), four
states have helped create digital vaccine passports to serve as a
government-backed proof-of-vaccination: California, New York, Oregon, and
Hawaii. The federal government provides states election administration funds
through grants authorized under the Help America Vote Act (HAVA) of 2002, for
which Congress appropriated $425 million in Fiscal Year 2020 for states to
improve the administration of federal elections through enhanced technology and
security measures. This legislation would place voter ID requirements on those
funds if states also have vaccine passport mandates.
Recent polling shows overwhelming, bipartisan support for Voter ID
laws. According to a Monmouth University poll released in June 2021, 80
percent of Americans back the concept of Voter ID laws, including 62 percent of
Democrats and 87 percent among independents. After the Senate voted on
Democrats’ $4 trillion budget resolution early Wednesday morning, they voted to
reconsider a liberal elections package which would overrule state Voter ID
laws. Senator Cramer had previously announced his opposition to the measure
and again voted no.