Warren Calls for Voter ID to Be Dropped in Favor of 'Sworn Statement of Identity'
Senator joins other Democrats calling for relaxed voting measures for November election

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) is calling for relaxed voting measures to be introduced ahead of the November elections, which includes dropping the current requirement for voters to present ID and replacing it with "a sworn statement of identity instead."
On Tuesday, Warren formally joined other progressive Democrats in demanding mail-in voting for the presidential election.
Warren, however, is taking it a step further by also pushing for a ban on cleaning voter rolls and urging officials to allow eligible individuals to vote “with a sworn statement of identity instead of a voter ID.”
Sen. Warren outlines her series of proposals in a post on Medium.
The former Democratic presidential candidate's measures include a requirement for states to mail ballots to every registered voter with pre-paid postage.
State officials must “waive absentee ballot requirements that undermine social distancing guidelines, such as requirements that absentee voters submit copies of their IDs or include a notary or witness signature with their mail-in ballot,” Warren demands.

Additionally, the former presidential hopeful is calling for a ban on cleaning voter rolls, stating, “Congress should ban states from purging their voter rolls unless an individual affirmatively requests to be removed or there is objective documentary evidence, such as an official record of death or affirmative change of address. ”
While she is demanding mail-in voting nationwide, Warren also believes in-person voting should be an option, albeit with key changes, according to Breitbart.
For instance, Warren wants to forgo providing proper identification and instead allow eligible individuals to vote “with a sworn statement of identity instead of a voter ID.”
She wants these many of these reforms incorporated in the next coronavirus relief package, calling for $4 billion to “ensure that states have the resources they need to successfully administer elections” and implement the election agenda items long pursued by Democrats:
The CARES Act provided $400 million dollars in election grants to help states “prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus.”
That’s a fraction of what it will cost states to make the necessary reforms.
Protecting our elections during this public health emergency will require billions in funding, not millions.
With elections continuing across the country and states struggling to meet the new demands imposed by this novel virus, Congress must move swiftly to fill the gap in funding and provide no less than $4 billion to ensure that states have the resources they need to successfully administer elections — while ensuring these resources are used appropriately by conditioning funding on adopting specific measures that will protect voters and reduce barriers to voting
Despite Democrats making demonstrative efforts to use the crisis to push their voting agenda, as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) demonstrated in her failed attempt to hijack the latest coronavirus relief package, Warren is accusing Republicans of using the crisis to “accelerate an undemocratic power grab and disenfranchise millions.”
“We must not allow Republicans to exploit the pandemic to engage in voter suppression when people are least equipped to fight back because they are staying home, caring for loved ones, or struggling to make ends meet — and many government offices are closed,” she wrote in her plan.

Several high profile Democrats have advocated election changes in the last two weeks, including Pelosi, who pushed ballot harvesting in her failed coronavirus relief bill.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) introduced the Natural Disaster and Emergency Ballot Act of 2020 (NDEBA) last month, which would also extend “no-excuse absentee vote-by-mail” to all states.
Pelosi has also stressed the need to include key changes to the voting methods in the next relief bill.
Last week, the Speaker said opposition to vote-by-mail is “so undermining of what our founders had in mind about full participation.”
“So in this next bill, we hope to get more resources to vote by mail,” she added:
Vote-by-mail is essential to protecting the future of our democracy as we confront this public health crisis. There is no legitimate argument against enacting it. #LSSC pic.twitter.com/WPgOgIivK0
— Nancy Pelosi (@SpeakerPelosi) April 3, 2020