The Photo ID constitutional amendment fight moved to the Minnesota Senate on Wednesday.
The Senate Rules and Administration Committee held a cordial but pointed discussion on the proposal to put photo ID before the state's voters on the general election ballot in November. The committee moved back the effective date to give local governments more time to work with the new mandate and passed the bill on to the Senate floor.
It passed the committee on a mixed voice vote.The full Senate is expected to debate and vote on the bill on Friday.
The Senate committee acted hours after a marathon, 9-hour-plus House floor debate resulted in a party-line vote to pass the bill. That meeting broke up after 2 a.m. Wednesday.
Sen. Scott Newman, R-Hutchinson, the Senate sponsor, said the Senate version differs from the House-passed version, which is sponsored by Rep. Mary Kiffmeyer, R-Big Lake.
If the two versions don't match up, there would need to either be a joint conference committee to work out differences, or a decision by one of the two houses to accept the other house's language. Newman said the Senate is sticking with its language.
The bill would ask voters to decide whether the Minnesota Constitution should be amended "to require that all in-person voters present an approved form of government-issued photographic identification at the time of voting; that those not voting in person provided government-issued proof of identity; that all voters be subject to substantially equivalent eligibility verification before a ballot is cast or counted; and that the state provide at no charge an approved photographic identification to eligible individuals."
Newman said the bill was amended to push the effective date back from June 30, 2013 to December 1, 2013. That means that the first statewide election it would apply to would be November 2014. Newman said that gives local governments "some breathing room."