February 8, 2013
Charleston Daily Mail -- Short takes, Feb. 9, 2013
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- THOMAS Fleming, former president of the Society of American Historians, recently shared in the Wall Street Journal a little personal history.

Fleming's father was a right-hand man of Jersey City Mayor Frank "Boss" Hague, who bought elections in the 1930s and 1940s. He knew all the tricks - vote-buying, imported "floaters" who went from precinct to precinct to vote, and zombie voters.

"My grandmother Mary Dolan died in 1940," Fleming wrote, "But she voted Democratic for the next 10 years."

Cheating was rationalized as ethnic groups battling "the dirty rotten stinking WASP Protestant Republicans of New Jersey," he wrote. World War II, in which he served with men of different backgrounds, changed his view.

"Later I became a historian of this nation's early years - and I can assure President Obama that no Founding Father would tolerate the idea of unidentified voters," Fleming wrote.

Fleming remains a Democrat, but he warns:

"I have to laugh when I hear current-day Democrats not only lobbying against voter-identification laws but campaigning to make voting even easier than it already is. More laughable is the idea of dressing up the matter as a civil rights issue . . . "

Looking out for the less fortunate can still be a force, Fleming said, "but that force, and the Democratic Party, will be constantly soiled and corrupted if the right and the privilege to vote becomes an easily manipulated joke."

Photo identification of voters is in both parties' best interests.

***

DON Perdue, D-Wayne, chairman of the House Health and Human Resources Committee, wants higher taxes on beer and cigarettes to fund drug treatment centers. This runs counter to a vow by Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin not to raise taxes.

Perdue favors a doubling of the existing 1-cent tax on a can of beer and a 50-cent increase per pack of cigarettes. He would also consider liquor and wine tax hikes.

"I know that I may be the only guy left standing out there that's going to get his brains kicked in because it's a tax," Perdue told Mannix Porterfield of the Register-Herald in Beckley.

"But you've got to be honest about it. What is causing our health problems in the state? Substance abuse. Over-utilization of tobacco."

Substance abuse is a problem, but as freshman Sen. Daniel Hall, D-Wyoming, noted "the problem is almost all due to the abuse of prescription pain medicine."

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