Rep. Ryan Spain | Facebook / Ryan Spain
Rep. Ryan Spain | Facebook / Ryan Spain
In a Jan. 6 Facebook post, Rep. Ryan Spain (R-Peoria) claimed, "Illinois Democrats weakened election integrity in Illinois with their latest lame-duck shenanigans. The solution is simple- Voter ID."
He shared a video of him on the House floor arguing against a bill that would ease voter signature regulations.
"This bill is being brought forward because in this past election, a county clerk in the county of DuPage was not following the law and rather than following the law and curing that deficiency, we're going to change the law to allow that practice to become acceptable in the future and I have a fundamental disagreement with that type of retroactive changing that we would do for something that's very important," Spain said. "In our state we have made the voter signature the most important component of how we protect the integrity of our elections and now by diluting it, by weakening it, by eliminating a requirement to follow that source document ... we are weakening the protections of our elections and folks it doesn't have to be this way."
Spain pushed voter ID legislation as a solution.
"I would love to be in a situation where the state of Illinois – for voting – is not relying on election judges and their signature match-up expertise to make sure that we have done all that we can to reduce voter fraud. There's a way to do it. We should not be relying on signatures in the state of Illinois. What we should be doing is what most states in our country do. Red states, blue states, swing states, the vast majority of states in the United States have a simple fix and it's voter ID. You show an ID when you go to vote."
On Feb. 17, 2021, Spain sponsored a bill to create a voter identification card and require Illinois voters to show a government-issued identification card in order to vote. The last actions on the bill were taken on March 27, 2021, when it was re-referred to the House Rules Committee.
According to Ballotpedia, Illinois voters are not required to show government ID when they show up to vote in person. The exception is if voters registered for the first time by mail and didn't submit their driver's license, state ID number, or the last four digits of their Social Security number. Those individuals must show an accepted form of ID with their home address on it.