Anonymous wrote:I’ve read conflicting information about this: I am a married woman, and have my US passport with my married name, would that be enough proof?
I also saw somebody mention naturalized citizens and needing their home birth certificate. But if you have your naturalized citizen paperwork, your US passport, your real ID would you be affected?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Republicans don't care if this actually passes or not. At the end of the day, it's simply propaganda to perpetuate the false claims of voter fraud. It won't pass and every time Democrats win an election, Republicans will scream "voter fraud!! That's why they were against requiring proof of citizenship to vote! They want illegals to vote so they can win!" And all the MAGA idiots eat it up.
This. It’s so obvious. The plan is just to sow uncertainty so Trump can try to pull another coup. Let’s not forget all the screaming he did about mail-in ballots months before the 2020 election. It’s the exact same playbook.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve read conflicting information about this: I am a married woman, and have my US passport with my married name, would that be enough proof?
I also saw somebody mention naturalized citizens and needing their home birth certificate. But if you have your naturalized citizen paperwork, your US passport, your real ID would you be affected?
No, it would not be enough, unless you brought your marriage license with you to vote, or reverted to your maiden name on all of your documents, matching your birth certificate.
Can you point me to where it says you must use your birth certificate to prove citizenship and why wouldn’t the US passport be enough?
I think the passport would be enough from my reading.
But my bet is that they will target Democrats and try to nullify whatever documentation they have.
the passport isn't enough if a married person takes their spouses name
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve read conflicting information about this: I am a married woman, and have my US passport with my married name, would that be enough proof?
I also saw somebody mention naturalized citizens and needing their home birth certificate. But if you have your naturalized citizen paperwork, your US passport, your real ID would you be affected?
No, it would not be enough, unless you brought your marriage license with you to vote, or reverted to your maiden name on all of your documents, matching your birth certificate.
Can you point me to where it says you must use your birth certificate to prove citizenship and why wouldn’t the US passport be enough?
I think the passport would be enough from my reading.
But my bet is that they will target Democrats and try to nullify whatever documentation they have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve read conflicting information about this: I am a married woman, and have my US passport with my married name, would that be enough proof?
I also saw somebody mention naturalized citizens and needing their home birth certificate. But if you have your naturalized citizen paperwork, your US passport, your real ID would you be affected?
No, it would not be enough, unless you brought your marriage license with you to vote, or reverted to your maiden name on all of your documents, matching your birth certificate.
Can you point me to where it says you must use your birth certificate to prove citizenship and why wouldn’t the US passport be enough?
Read the law...the documentation has to match the birth certificate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve read conflicting information about this: I am a married woman, and have my US passport with my married name, would that be enough proof?
I also saw somebody mention naturalized citizens and needing their home birth certificate. But if you have your naturalized citizen paperwork, your US passport, your real ID would you be affected?
No, it would not be enough, unless you brought your marriage license with you to vote, or reverted to your maiden name on all of your documents, matching your birth certificate.
Can you point me to where it says you must use your birth certificate to prove citizenship and why wouldn’t the US passport be enough?
Anonymous wrote:Republicans don't care if this actually passes or not. At the end of the day, it's simply propaganda to perpetuate the false claims of voter fraud. It won't pass and every time Democrats win an election, Republicans will scream "voter fraud!! That's why they were against requiring proof of citizenship to vote! They want illegals to vote so they can win!" And all the MAGA idiots eat it up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve read conflicting information about this: I am a married woman, and have my US passport with my married name, would that be enough proof?
I also saw somebody mention naturalized citizens and needing their home birth certificate. But if you have your naturalized citizen paperwork, your US passport, your real ID would you be affected?
No, it would not be enough, unless you brought your marriage license with you to vote, or reverted to your maiden name on all of your documents, matching your birth certificate.
Can you point me to where it says you must use your birth certificate to prove citizenship and why wouldn’t the US passport be enough?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve read conflicting information about this: I am a married woman, and have my US passport with my married name, would that be enough proof?
I also saw somebody mention naturalized citizens and needing their home birth certificate. But if you have your naturalized citizen paperwork, your US passport, your real ID would you be affected?
No, it would not be enough, unless you brought your marriage license with you to vote, or reverted to your maiden name on all of your documents, matching your birth certificate.

Anonymous wrote:I’ve read conflicting information about this: I am a married woman, and have my US passport with my married name, would that be enough proof?
I also saw somebody mention naturalized citizens and needing their home birth certificate. But if you have your naturalized citizen paperwork, your US passport, your real ID would you be affected?
Anonymous wrote:I’ve read conflicting information about this: I am a married woman, and have my US passport with my married name, would that be enough proof?
I also saw somebody mention naturalized citizens and needing their home birth certificate. But if you have your naturalized citizen paperwork, your US passport, your real ID would you be affected?