HATTIESBURG, Miss. - Perhaps the most contentious issue on the Mississippi ballot Tuesday was Initiative 26, a controversial proposal to define "personhood," and the legal rights that go along with it, as beginning at the instant an egg is fertilized. The ambiguously worded and short-sighted proposal, if passed, could have had terrible consequences for Mississippi women and their families including: banning abortion without exception, prohibiting many forms of common birth control, and banning In vitro fertilization.
The arguments behind this initiative were passionate and emotional, and polling prior to the election showed that the electorate was split on the issue. However, come Tuesday, Mississippi voters decided that this Initiative was simply too extreme, and soundly rejected it by a 16-point margin.
Another controversial, though less-discussed, topic that Mississippi voters faced was Initiative 27, a proposed amendment to the state constitution that would require all voters to present a state-issued photo ID to receive a ballot, instead of the several already accepted mediums of determining voter eligibility. This amendment, purportedly to combat "voter fraud", was best described by Hattiesburg mayor and Democratic gubernatorial candidate Johnny DuPree, who referred to it as "a solution chasing a problem"
In fact, voter fraud in the nation is extremely rare, and has not been a problem. Voter ID laws, which have been popping up in Republican-controlled states, have a different effect: namely, voter suppression. Twenty-one million otherwise eligible American voters lack a photo ID, and these voters tend to fall into categories that typically vote for Democratic candidates: the working poor, the elderly, students, and African Americans. Due to the lack of voter fraud, these laws can only be viewed as one thing: voter suppression.
keep reading at:
http://peoplesworld.org/big-win-for-women-in-mississippi-but-downsides-too/