Forget showing an ID: Former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown is kicking election security up a notch.

Appearing on KPIX and criticizing the recount debacle in Broward County, Florida, Brown said municipalities should use ATM technology to count votes.

“That machine that said I didn’t have but 52 bucks was correct. Believe me, that technology ought to be what we use,” Brown said.

“And it ought to be national. We should not have all of these states and counties,” he said.

The host noted the voter could get a receipt showing their vote “just like an ATM.”

“Not only that though,” Brown said, “if you have to do your print, you have to do your thumbprint,” demonstrating it on the anchor’s desk.

“Or you have to do facial,” he continued, pointing at his face, “before you could vote. Perfect,” he said.

“And anybody who shows up and does that, you get counted,” Brown said.

Progressives have long fought any sort of voter integrity.

In 2016, Yellowhammer news noted Alabama Democrats fought a voter ID law, but the DNC required an identification card to vote in the party election.

In a twist of irony, the Democratic National Convention is requiring delegates to show photo ID to receive their official credentials. While the Democrats require an ID to get into their convention, they have consistently fought against voter ID laws requiring citizens to show one when they vote.

During the 2011 Regular Legislative Session Governor Robert Bentley (R-Ala.) signed a voter ID law that went into full effect for the 2014 primary elections. Act 2011-673 requires an Alabama voter to have a specific type of photo identification at the polls in order to vote. Since that time, Democrats across the country have decried the law as “racist” and “hateful”.

The DNC platform declared, “we will continue to fight against discriminatory voter identification laws, which disproportionately burden young voters, diverse communities, people of color, low income families, people with disabilities, the elderly, and women.”

The DNC would undoubtedly oppose Brown’s proposed level of election security.