Still not convinced it's all that hard. Since we are trading anecdotes. I managed to get my father and mothers birth certificates 80 years after they were born in different states from where I am now. Sure, it cost money, $10-20 and postage. Getting mine was easier but about the same price.
Your experiences may not translate to all other people.
Were they born in a hospital and issued a birth certificate at the time? (Many people were born at home in the middle of the last century, which complicates things since they were never issued a certificate in the first place.)
And your "$10 cost"? This is going to depend on the state. Birth certificates cost $22 in texas, and that is just for the base fee. Add in payment processing fees, shipping, etc. and the cost can easily be over $50 depending on the state. Now YOU might not think $50 is a hardship. But if you are a retiree living on a fixed income, or someone working a minimum wage job, that type of money might be a bit harder to come by.
I will assume the 7 million number is correct, that's about 4% of eligible voters who according to cited source are less likely to vote in the first place. It appears to be about 6% for people of color.
Well, lets put that into context shall we?
The margin of victory between Stubby McBonespurs and Harris was 1.5%. So the number of people who would be disenfranchised by lack of voter ID is more than twice as high as the margin of victory in the last election.
Add to that the fact that this also impacts congressional races. You may have districts where the margin of victory is thin enough that it could easily affect the outcome. For example, in the 2024 election, Iowa's first district had a margin of victory of less than 0.2%. Colorodo's 8th district had a margin of victory of around 0.7%.. Even though "only" 4% of voters would be affected by strict photo ID laws, it could definitely have an impact in those races.)
Sure, change your name and it will be more difficult, that will affect most married women, another reason why they shouldn't change their names, and probably up to the triple digits for men, and most transfolks. It is also only going to affect those folks that weren't wise enough to keep the paperwork. Not sure what we can do about them but as noted, it can still be done. There will also be some folks that have lost paper work due to fire, flood and what not. That will suck but suspect it's a lot easier to get if you do so in short order and while you still have photo ID.
First of all, you keep adding all these marginalized groups (oh, a few people here are affected but its not that many. Oh a few people here are also affected but its not that many.) Add it all up though and you have a pretty big block of people.
Secondly, the big question is... why bother? The type of voter fraud that photo ID would actually prevent is extremely rare (supposedly affecting around 0.00004% of all votes cast), far less than the number of people that would be disenfranchised by strict photo ID laws. So you want to put new burdens on millions of people and drive up government costs (even if those IDs are free to get, the government still has to foot the bill), all to fix something that isn't really a problem. Sounds like a huge waste to me. You know, the type of waste the government should be avoiding.
If this is actually a thing, how about we work on getting those folks IDs?
Sure, sounds great... "just make it even easier to get".
You see, here is the problem... the republicans don't WANT to make it easier for marginalized groups to get the required IDs. For example, another poster pointed out how one red state closed dozens of DMV offices (the place people would most likely get their photo ID done) in areas that had larger minority populations. Sure, they may make some token effort to "make things easier", but you can be sure that once the republicans want to fund another round of tax cuts for millionaires, they will target whatever efforts that were made to make obtaining ID easier.
Just look at all the idiots here talking "How easy it is to get".... they have no real clue how things work.
Sure, you can live in the US without one, no doubt it's a lot harder than not.
I suspect for most people who don't have ID, they would see no benefit to having one (outside of voting).
Most of the claims made by idiots here seem to be "you need it for renting/taxes/working", etc. But most of those are, well, wrong.
I'd start with a DMV office at prisons and jails, if you don't have one when you come in, they can get to work on it while you serve your term. Sell to the cops and prison guards by letting them do there DMV business in their office.
Yeah, I can see that being one of the first things republicans eliminate when they decide to cut costs again. "Why are we running DMV offices in prison when inmates can't drive. We need to cut costs by centralizing everything in one big office, that will be located 10 miles outside the city limits, and is only open week days from 9 till noon.".