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The official positions of the Constitution Party are stated in its platform. Articles and transcripts in this newsroom contain the opinions of the authors and are not necessarily to be construed as representing the official positions of the Constitution Party. |
Repeal the Real ID Act
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by Resolution
Whereas, The national ID card called for in the Real ID Act of 2005 is repressive, invasive, and unconstitutionally violating the fourth amendment right of the people to be secure; and Whereas, The dangerous implications of this federal mandate include privacy concerns, expense compliance costs for states and federal meddling in states’ rights; and, Whereas, Real ID has been unadvisedly promoted as a deterrent to terrorism and illegal immigration, but would not resolve either of those problems as evidenced by the fact that several of the September 11th hijackers used legitimate driver’s licenses; and Whereas, If Real ID is placed in force, illegal aliens would potentially have a national database from which to buy and sell illegal identification; and Whereas, The Real ID requires a digital photo and possibly a fingerprint on each license, thereby turning Real ID into a gold mine for identity thieves; and Whereas, This $11 billion endeavor could limit law-abiding citizens the uncompromised freedom to travel, open a bank account, secure employment or purchase a firearm; and Whereas, States already straining under the weight of federal bureaucratic compliance costs would be further burdened by additional expense; and Whereas, States will experience difficulty paying for massive computer systems to hook up to a federal database and complying by the December 2009 deadline; and Whereas, Missouri State Rep. James Guest (R) has formed a coalition of lawmakers from 34 states to file bills that oppose the Real ID; and Whereas, Public outcry against the scheme has resulted in a dozen states following Maine in a revolt against Real ID, including Arizona, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Massachusetts, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming; and Whereas, U.S. Citizens in such states could be denied access to federal buildings, bank accounts or boarding commercial airplanes; and Whereas, American citizens should not be required to carry identification papers or be data based by the federal government; therefore be it Resolved, That the Constitution Party strongly urges freedom-loving Americans to demand that Congress repeal the Real ID Act. |