TPM
A federal court in Washington D.C. on Thursday rejected a Texas law
requiring voters to show photographic identification in order to cast a
ballot.
A three-judge panel found that the law imposes “strict, unforgiving burdens on the poor.”
“The State of Texas enacted a voter ID law that — at least to our
knowledge — is the most stringent in the country,” the opinion, embedded
below, reads. “That law will almost certainly have retrogressive
effect: it imposes strict, unforgiving burdens on the poor, and racial
minorities in Texas are disproportionately likely to live in poverty.
And crucially, the Texas legislature defeated several amendments that
could have made this a far closer case.”
The law, signed by Republican Gov. Rick Perry in the spring of
2011, would have required voters casting a ballot at a polling place to
show either a driver’s licence, an election identification certificate, a
Deptartment of Public Safety personal ID card, a military ID, a
citizenship certificate, a passport or a concealed carry permit.
The Justice Department objected
to Texas’ voter ID law in March because the state’s own data indicated
the law would have a heavier impact on Hispanic voters. One set of data
provided by the state showed Hispanics were 46.5 percent more likely to
lack a state-issued form of photo identification, while another showed
Hispanics were 120 percent more likely to lack that type of ID.
Texas is one of several states that must have changes to their voting
laws cleared by either the Justice Department or a federal court in
D.C. under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. Earlier this week, a
separate panel of federal judges tossed out Texas’ redistricting plan,
ruling that it intentionally discriminated against black and Hispanic
voters while protecting the districts of incumbent white members of
Congress.
In the voter ID case, the state argued DOJ had to approve their law because Georgia’s voter ID law was approved during the Bush administration. Texas preemptively sued the Justice Department over the law in January.
DOJ argued in court that the passage of the voter ID law had to be
viewed in the context of “tremendous population growth” within Texas’
Latino community. A three-judge panel hearing the Texas voter ID case in
early July seemed skeptical of the state’s case, suggesting that the distance voters would have to travel to obtain photo identification were burdensome.
Rep. Lamar Smith (R-TX), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee that oversees the Justice Department, attacked
DOJ for using a Democratic-leaning firm to analyze the state’s data,
saying people would be outraged if a Republican administration used a
“firm run by Karl Rove.” As it turns out, one of Texas’ witnesses who claimed voter ID wouldn’t have an impact on minority turnout used to work for Rove himself.
Perry accused Attorney General Eric Holder of trying to “incite racial tension” by calling voter ID a “poll tax.”
Federal Court Rules On Texas Voter ID
No comments:
Post a Comment