Courts block voter ID laws in Wisconsin and Texas, ahead of 2014 midterms
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The US Supreme Court blocked a politically contentious voter identification law in Wisconsin late聽Thursday 鈥 a setback for Republican efforts to require all voters to present a valid, photo ID before casting ballots in the聽Nov. 4聽elections.
At nearly the same time聽Thursday聽evening, a federal judge in Texas ruled that a similar Republican voter ID measure violated the Constitution, saying the Texas law 鈥渃reates an unconstitutional burden on the right to vote, has an impermissible discriminatory effect against Hispanics and African-Americans, and was imposed with an unconstitutional discriminatory purpose.鈥 聽
The judge, Nelva Gonzales Ramos, appointed by President Obama to the southern district of Texas, also said the measure 鈥渃onstitutes an unconstitutional poll tax.鈥
Voter ID laws have been a deeply partisan issue throughout the country the past few years. Thursday鈥檚 rulings come as Democrats in a number of Republican-controlled states bitterly contest recent measures that GOP lawmakers insist are necessary to combat voter fraud.
In 2010, only two states, Indiana and Georgia, had strict laws requiring photo IDs. But since then, a flurry of new strict photo ID laws have been enacted by eight more GOP-controlled states, including Texas and Wisconsin,聽.
And voters in at least 15 states will face newly tightened polling restrictions this November, as laws banning same-day registration and Sunday voting, as well as laws restricting early voting, also take effect. That's the most since Reconstruction following the Civil War, .聽Strict photo-ID laws also聽have been passed in New Hampshire and North Carolina, but will not go into effect until after 2014.
Democrats say there is scant evidence of voter impersonation, insisting such measures are merely attempts to suppress the votes of older and mostly low-income and minority citizens, many of whom do not have the required photo IDs. The majority of such voters tend to vote for Democrats, experts say.
A issued by the General Accounting Office聽Wednesday聽found that voter ID laws disproportionately impact minorities. After implementation of a voter identification requirement, Kansas saw a 3.7 percent greater drop among black voters than among whites.
Many state and federal jurisdictions have been wrangling over the constitutionality of many of the new voter restrictions and photo ID laws implemented after the Supreme Court invalidated sections of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 last year. The landmark decision ruled that the racial discrimination of the past no longer justified restrictions on state legislatures鈥 ability to regulate voting procedures.
In a聽聽Thursday, the Supreme Court blocked Wisconsin鈥檚 voter ID law for the time being. The state law, passed in 2011, has been through a roller coaster of conflicting rulings the past three years in both state and federal courts 鈥 also marked by partisan divisions.
Earlier this year, US District Judge Lynn Adelman, nominated by former President Bill Clinton, blocked Wisconsin鈥檚 photo ID requirement, saying it would disenfranchise more than 300,000 of Wisconsin鈥檚 registered voters, or 9 percent of the electorate, who did not have the required IDs.
But last month, a three-judge panel of Republican appointees vacated Judge Adelman鈥檚 order, reinstating the Wisconsin rule. The full 10-judge panel on the US Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago then deadlocked in a 5 to 5 partisan split when deciding to reconsider the panel鈥檚 decision.
Then, on Monday this week, the three-judge panel of Republican appointees ruled the Wisconsin law constitutional, saying it was similar to the 2008 law in Indiana upheld by the Supreme Court.
Civil libertarians聽聽the Supreme Court on Tuesday, saying implementing the law so close to the November elections would 鈥渟ow confusion at the polls and suppress voting in the聽Nov. 4general election in Wisconsin. Chaos in an election 鈥 especially when entirely preventable 鈥 is undemocratic.鈥澛
The high court鈥檚 ruling聽on Thursday put a stay on the panel鈥檚 decision, without giving a reason for its decision. Conservative justices Samuel Alito, Antonin Scalia, and Clarence Thomas dissented.
鈥淚 believe the voter ID law is constitutional,鈥 said Wisconsin Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen, 鈥渁nd nothing in the court鈥檚 order suggests otherwise.鈥
He added he would try to reinstate the photo ID law in the weeks before the election, where Republican Gov. Scott Walker, who led the passage of the law, is locked in a fierce reelection battle.
In Texas, the office of Attorney General Greg Abbott also rejected the ruling by Judge Gonzales Ramos.
鈥淭he state of Texas will immediately appeal and will urge the Fifth Circuit to resolve this matter quickly to avoid voter confusion in the upcoming election,鈥 his office said. 鈥淭he U.S. Supreme Court has already ruled that voter ID laws are constitutional, so we are confident the Texas law will be upheld on appeal.鈥
Experts expect the nation鈥檚 highest court to take up the issue in coming sessions, given the strong ruling by the federal circuit court in Texas.
鈥淭exas failed to identify a single instance of in-person voter fraud鈥攖he purported justification for Texas鈥 photo ID law,鈥 said Sherrilyn Ifill, president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, which is party to the Texas case. 鈥淭he Court today effectively ruled that racial discrimination simply cannot spread to the ballot box.鈥