Los Angeles Times

Editorial: American voters don't need a dress code

Should voters have to abide by a dress code? The idea seems absurd. Yet when Andrew Cilek showed up to cast his ballot in Hennepin County, Minn., in 2010, he was asked to remove or cover up a Tea Party shirt and a button reading "Please ID Me" (a message promoting a controversial step by poll workers - demanding identification from would-be voters - as a way to guard against election fraud).

Cilek eventually

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