New Hampshire
Related: About this forumNew Hampshire Senate Passes Bill to Redefine 'Residency' for Voting
A bill that redefines the states residency standards passed the Senate with Republican support despite opposition from Gov. Chris Sununu and is heading back to the House for further review.
The latest version of HB372 says that to be considered a resident, for voting or otherwise, someone needs to demonstrate an intent to stay in New Hampshire through all of their actions they can't just say they plan to be here for the indefinite future.
Supporters, including Sen. Andy Sanborn, a Bedford Republican running for Congress, described it as a move to bring more integrity to the states elections.
The Secretary of State himself has said we have a trust issue in our state, and we need to fix that, because we need to make sure that every vote counts, Sanborn said.
Read more: http://nhpr.org/post/nh-senate-passes-bill-redefine-residency-voting#stream/0
greymattermom
(5,794 posts)who spend a month in Florida every year can't vote?
tymorial
(3,433 posts)All we had to do was shown up to the polling location with a student ID. You can register at the polls and the student ID was all that was necessary. Could have been the town though and not larger policy. This was 20 years ago though.
Sophia4
(3,515 posts)really make. People vote where they are. But it is illegal to vote twice in an election. What is the problem? Why shouldn't students be able to vote where they go to school? As long as they aren't also voting where their parents live. What percentage of students return home to live at the address of their parents when they finish school? I didn't.
I don't see a problem with New Hampshire's old voting eligibility rules.
It's hard enough to get people out to vote once. Who in the world wants to vote more than that? I haven't met anyone personally. And I've registered a lot of voters.
tymorial
(3,433 posts)Especially if they lived far enough away that they couldn't get home. It was common.
Tiggeroshii
(11,088 posts)sinkingfeeling
(52,976 posts)1 1/2 to 3 years with my former company. How would one prove they intend to stay? I would say nobody in NH under the age of 90, could vote.
left-of-center2012
(34,195 posts)Having a N.H. driver's license (or state I.D.) should qualify you as a resident.
teamster633
(2,032 posts)...so disenfranchising college students is a high priority.