None
No. Federal states that if you have a CDL in one state, you cannot have any other drivers license in any other state.
Yes, all fifty states accept drivers licenses from other states and even from foreign countries. If you move to another state and no longer live in Hawaii, you will eventually be required to obtain a drivers license from your new state showing your new address.
If you have a valid drivers license from one state in the United States it would be honored in all other states in the United States. If you move from one state to another you have a certain amount of time to get a license in the state you will be residing in.
Nope. There is a national database that notifies other states of suspended licenses.
Suspensions are reported to the national center so you cannot obtain a license in any other state until you are first reinstate in Louisiana
you can drive anywhere in the U.S. with any states drivers liscense.It is possible to drive across the country without having to obtain a drivers license in each state because a drivers license is valid in all 50 states. Most states also have a drivers license compact that reports traffic infractions.
Absolutely not. The upper 50 states all run off of the same system. If your license is suspended in the state of your primary residence, you cannot get a drivers license in any other state until your status in your primary state changes. This even applies if you change your state of residence.
If your drivers license is revoked in one state, can you get a drivers license in another state?
If you don't have, or do not qualify for, a state drivers license, the state also issues state identification cards. The requirement that you positively identify yourself with verifiable documentation as to who you really are still exists, but it should serve as an alternative picture-ID to the drivers license. As it is in most(all?) other states, you cannot possess BOTH a Texas drivers license and a Texas identification card at the same time - only one or the other.
No. Suspensions by any state or territory of the United States are recognised throughout the whole of the United States. No other state will issue you a licence during the period of your suspension.
No. You can legally only possess a drivers license from the state you reside in. It would make no difference anyway - all states share their DMV information with one another and honor each other's court decisions.
Yes. But why would you want to. One state license is valid in all states.