Azathoth » wrote:WTF? Your political affiliation is on your voting card?
Sure. But it's not a card. You show up and give your name and address and they look you up on the role to make sure you're registered, and to figure out what kind of ballot to give you. They're different for the different parties, in some circumstances. Saves money when you know how many to print, too.
The "voter ID" laws are laws to require people to show ID, instead of just stating their name and address. People here who aren't fucking rabid Nazis (thread is already godwinized, too late! Suffer, motherfuckers) don't like it because poor people are more likely to have no fixed address and no state ID, and minorities are more likely to be poor. Forms of voter ID law that don't take that into account are liable to be declared unconstitutional, unless the Reprehensible Party gets to appoint a couple more Nazi justices to the Supreme Court.
Azathoth » wrote:Is this compulsory or is it like being a member of a political party in the UK.
It's voluntary to register to vote, but if you don't you don't get to vote. And in some states, you get a different ballot depending on which party you're a member of; for example, if you don't register as a Democrat you don't get to vote in the Democratic Primary, and so forth. It differs from state to state; some have so-called "open primaries" where everybody can vote for one candidate without regard to party, and the two or three highest vote-getters move on to the general election.
Azathoth » wrote:Even so it defeats the object of a secret ballot if your card proclaims the way you are expected to vote.
In the general election you can vote for whoever you want; it's just in the primary that you're limited to a particular party's candidates, and again, only in some states.
It's kind of like (IIRC) the way you guys select the PM: whichever party has the majority in the lower house of Parliament gets to vote on it from among their members (the details may vary; I'm no expert on British election law). You could equally say this is unfair because they can't select someone from another party. But it's a quibble.