South Carolina voters who do not present an accepted photo ID at the polls have two options:
Vote with a Reasonable Impediment Statement
This option is for voters who don’t have and can’t reasonably get an accepted form of photo ID.
How to vote using a Reasonable Impediment Declaration:
- Bring your non-photo voter registration card
- Tell the poll worker that you don’t have a photo ID and could not get one
- Complete and sign a Reasonable Impediment Statement
- Vote a provisional ballot (counted unless election commission has reason to believe your reasonable impediment statement is false)
A “reasonable impediment” is something you can’t control that stops you from getting an accepted photo ID.
South Carolina accepts the following reasons:
- lack of transportation
- lack of birth certificate (or other necessary documents)
- disability or illness
- conflict with your work schedule
- family responsibilities
- religious objection to being photographed
- any other obstacle you find reasonable
Vote a Provisional Ballot and Return with ID
Cast a provisional ballot if you can’t to present ID or vote under a reasonable impediment exception. Provisional ballots make sure eligible voters are not rejected at the polls.
For your provisional ballot to count, you must submit an accepted photo ID to you county’s elections office before the election is certified. This usually happens on the Thursday or Friday following Election Day.
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Contact us if you have questions or need free help getting ID.