Federal Courts Strike Down Voter ID Restrictions in North Carolina and Wisconsin

Mayhem

Banned
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/30/u...n-north-carolina-voter-id-provision.html?_r=0

A federal appeals court decisively struck down North Carolina’s voter identification law on Friday, saying its provisions deliberately “target African-Americans with almost surgical precision” in an effort to depress black turnout at the polls.

The sweeping 83-page decision by a panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit upended voting procedures in a battleground state about three months before Election Day.

The ruling tossed out North Carolina’s requirement that voters present photo identification at the polls and restored voters’ ability to register on Election Day, to register before reaching the 18-year-old voting age, and to cast early ballots, provisions the law had fully or partly eliminated.

The court also held that the ballots of people who had mistakenly voted at the wrong polling station should be deemed valid.

In another decision on Friday, a federal judge ruled that parts of Wisconsin’s voter ID law are unconstitutional. Noting that “a preoccupation with mostly phantom election fraud leads to real incidents of disenfranchisement, “ the judge, James Peterson, ordered the state to make more forms of identification acceptable. He also overturned certain restrictions on absentee balloting and early and weekend voting.

The court decisions —the third and fourth federal rulings in recent weeks against Republican-enacted voting restrictions — were made as the two political parties raced from their summer conventions into the critical final months of the campaign, with Wisconsin, like North Carolina, considered a contested state.

North Carolina’s Republican-controlled legislature rewrote the state’s voting rules in 2013 shortly after the Supreme Court struck down a section of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 that had given the Justice Department the power to oversee changes in election procedures in areas with a history of racial discrimination. Forty of the state’s 100 counties had been subject to oversight.


Civil rights advocates and the Justice Department had sued to block the law, but a Federal
District Court judge upheld it in April, writing that the state’s “significant, shameful past discrimination” had largely abated in the last 25 years and that the law was not motivated by bias.

On Friday, the three-judge panel emphatically disagreed, saying the lower court’s amply documented ruling had failed to consider critical aspects of the legislature’s action, including “the inextricable link between race and politics in North Carolina.”

The judges noted that Republican leaders had drafted their restrictions on voting only after receiving data indicating that African-Americans would be the voters most significantly affected by them.

“We cannot ignore the record evidence that, because of race, the legislature enacted one of the largest restrictions of the franchise in modern North Carolina history,” they wrote. “The court seems to have missed the forest in carefully surveying the many trees,” they stated. The panel stopped short of reimposing federal oversight on the state’s elections, saying that striking down the law was enough.

Voting rights advocates called the ruling, which Republicans say they will appeal, a resounding victory. Fresh from speaking Thursday night at the Democratic National Convention, the Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II, the president of the North Carolina branch of the N.A.A.C.P., which is a plaintiff in the lawsuit, called the decision “a moral and constitutional vindication of our constitutional critique of this extremist legislature and our extremist governor.

“A political majority doesn’t give you the power to run roughshod over the Constitution,” he said.

Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch, who was in Baton Rouge, La., on Friday, also welcomed the decision, saying the law “sent a message that contradicted some of the most basic principles of our democracy.

“The ability of Americans to have a voice in the direction of their country — to have a fair and free opportunity to help write the story of this nation — is fundamental to who we are,” she said.

Republicans denounced the opinion as wrongheaded and politically motivated, particularly because the three judges who decided the case had been nominated to the appeals court by either President Bill Clinton or President Obama. (One of them, however, had originally been named by President George W. Bush in 2003 to a vacant seat on the Federal District Court in South Carolina.)

“Since today’s decision by three partisan Democrats ignores legal precedent, ignores the fact that other federal courts have used North Carolina’s law as a model and ignores the fact that a majority of other states have similar protections in place, we can only wonder if the intent is to reopen the door for voter fraud” in November’s federal and state elections, State Senator Phil Berger and the House speaker, Tim Moore, said in a statement. They pledged to appeal the ruling.

So did Gov. Pat McCrory, a Republican who is locked in one of the country’s tightest races for governor. “Photo IDs are required to purchase Sudafed, cash a check, board an airplane or enter a federal courtroom,” Mr. McCrory said. “Yet three Democratic judges are undermining the integrity of our elections while also maligning our state.”

Republicans in the state legislature have long justified the law’s restrictions on voting by saying they were aimed at ending rampant voter fraud.
The law “re-establishes a confidence in our election process, and therefore our government,” a principal sponsor, State Senator Bob Rucho, said in 2013.

On Friday, the appeals court dismissed that argument, saying the restrictions “constitute inapt remedies for the problems assertedly justifying them and, in fact, impose cures for problems that did not exist.” Academic studies have repeatedly concluded that fraud at the ballot box — the sort that photo identification requirements might reduce — is already vanishingly rare.

The North Carolina decision, combined with earlier rulings against voter-identification laws in Texas and Wisconsin, could figure in November’s elections. Friday’s ruling stated pointedly that whether or not the North Carolina restrictions were driven completely by racial bias, they were clearly designed to impede a bloc of minority voters that has long been a major element of the Democratic base.

North Carolina has become a swing state in national elections in recent years in no small part because the protections of the Voting Rights Act allowed black voter turnout to approach that of whites, the court stated.

North Carolina is being sharply contested in the current election: Hillary Clinton is already advertising heavily in the state, and Donald J. Trump held a rally there as the Democrats opened their convention on Monday.

The state ended its decades-long history of backing Republican presidential candidates in 2008, when Barack Obama eked out a narrow victory there. But in 2012, Mitt Romney reclaimed the state for the Republicans.

This year, Democrats are resting their hopes on a strong turnout among black voters as they try to counter Mr. Trump’s appeal among North Carolina’s white, working-class voters.

The clauses that were overturned in the North Carolina law, labeled the Voter Information Verification Act, or V.I.V.A., made voting harder in a number of ways. A much-discussed provision, which took effect this year, required voters either to produce one of six accepted forms of identification, such as a driver’s license, passport or military ID, or cast a provisional ballot.

Critics argued that some voters lacked those documents and that the law omitted some forms of identification, such as student IDs, held by blocs of voters who favor Democrats.

Among the other provisions, which were in effect during the 2014 elections, one of the most criticized shortened the state’s early voting period to 10 days, from 17. Voting rights groups charged that this would crimp African-American voter turnout, in part by eliminating one of the Sunday voting days on which black churches typically transported worshipers to a voting site.

Friday’s opinions were just the latest setbacks in recent weeks to advocates of photo IDs and other voting restrictions. The Wisconsin ruling, which appeared likely to be appealed, came only days after a different federal judge issued a separate ruling on that state’s voter ID law, which has been the subject of a legal battle since the Republican-held State Capitol approved it in 2011.

In the ruling earlier this month, a judge said Wisconsin voters without photo identification could vote in November if they presented affidavits swearing to their identities.

In Texas, a federal appeals court has ruled that the state’s photo ID law, among the nation’s toughest, must be softened to eliminate its discriminatory impact. A lower court had said that the law violates the Voting Rights Act and that as many as 600,000 Texans lacked any of the photo IDs the law demands.
 

BCsSecretAlias

Closed Account
Another useless post that is on the front page of every internet news source from Yahoo to Drudge Report.

Good looking out, scoop.
 

Ace Boobtoucher

Founder and Captain of the Douchepatrol
The true racists are the people who assume a group of people as a whole are too stupid/lazy/incompetent/disadvantaged to be able to obtain identification.

Catholic charities will get ID for people in order to help them obtain jobs. They'll drive them to the SSA or DMV or wherever and pay for the stuff out of charitable donations, at no cost to the individual. Even Texas had free government issue ID for those less fortunate.

Election observers in other countries find this kind of rhetoric preposterous. Almost all industrialized democracies — and most that are not — require voters to prove their identity before voting.

The vast majority of countries require voter ID — usually photo ID — to prevent fraud and duplicate votes at the polls. Our neighbors do. Canada requires voter ID. Mexico’s “Credencial para Votar” has a hologram, a photo, and other information embedded in it, and it is impossible to effectively tamper with. Confidence in the integrity of elections has soared since its introduction in the 1990s.

At a 2012 conference in Washington at which election officials from more than 60 countries met to observe the U.S. presidential election, most were astonished that so many U.S. states don’t require voter ID. For the head of Libya’s national election commission, the method by which Americans vote is startling in that it depends so much on trust and the good faith of election officials and voters alike.
http://www.nationalreview.com/artic...d-hillary-clinton-are-determined-us-wont-john
 
The true racists are the people who assume a group of people as a whole are too stupid/lazy/incompetent/disadvantaged to be able to obtain identification.

Catholic charities will get ID for people in order to help them obtain jobs. They'll drive them to the SSA or DMV or wherever and pay for the stuff out of charitable donations, at no cost to the individual. Even Texas had free government issue ID for those less fortunate.

http://www.nationalreview.com/artic...d-hillary-clinton-are-determined-us-wont-john

The court also rejected the idea that the rules were a de facto poll tax, because the main form of ID listed required a fee. Here, the court ruled that, since the state issues a free Election Identification Certi*ficate (EIC), that argument held no water. Judge Ramos had sided with the plaintiffs, because the birth certificate required to get an EIC still costs money. DeBeauvoir echoed that sentiment, saying that EICs are "free, except that it's not free because you still have to have your background documentation." Moreover, she noted that "a piddly amount" of EICs had been issued to Travis County voters, and that's worrisome, because voters in the area have much access to issuing locations. Many rural DPS stations have been closed over the last few years, "so you can't even get to a location without driving quite a distance."
http://www.austinchronicle.com/news/2016-07-29/whats-the-fix-for-texas-voter-id-law/
 

Ace Boobtoucher

Founder and Captain of the Douchepatrol
Semantics. And pure crap. I gave just one example of a charitable organization that helps needy people bypass those strictures. There are many more.
 

Mayhem

Banned
I [state FreeOnes user name] do solemnly swear to uphold and defend the parts of the Constitution Bill O'Reilly tells me it's OK to like. When confronted with the sheer totality of my own ignorance, I'll just take the opposite position of someone I don't like. I freely affirm I will deflect all my Party's errors onto something someone else did wrong to my last breath. With Liberty and Justice For All.....(except darkies and queers......and spics with an accent)

Congratulations, you're now a moron. Don't worry, plenty of others to meet.
 

Jagger69

Three lullabies in an ancient tongue
This is ridiculous. I don't get the opposition to this. I have to show an ID for damn-near everything from as buying a beer to getting on an airplane but yet somehow it is inequitable to insist on the same requirement in order to vote? As a taxpayer and voter, I would be in favor of anything that legitimizes that the person voting is indeed who they say they are. I would also be in favor of any efforts that would enable and encourage people to easily acquire a picture ID. No American citizen should be without proper identification for any reason.
 
In France, you need an photo ID to vote (ID card, passport or driving licence). But every citizen ig given a freed ID card when they reach 18. All you have to do is to got to the TownHall, bring some documents, sign some papers and you'll receive your ID within a month
 

Jagger69

Three lullabies in an ancient tongue
In France, you need an photo ID to vote (ID card, passport or driving licence). But every citizen ig given a freed ID card when they reach 18. All you have to do is to got to the TownHall, bring some documents, sign some papers and you'll receive your ID within a month

There you go! Simple. And so many here seem to think that France is such a fucked-up country! ;)
 

BCsSecretAlias

Closed Account
This is ridiculous. I don't get the opposition to this. I have to show an ID for damn-near everything from as buying a beer to getting on an airplane but yet somehow it is inequitable to insist on the same requirement in order to vote? As a taxpayer and voter, I would be in favor of anything that legitimizes that the person voting is indeed who they say they are. I would also be in favor of any efforts that would enable and encourage people to easily acquire a picture ID. No American citizen should be without proper identification for any reason.

Well fuck.

Some of Jagger's liberal friends would want to take him out to the woodshed over those comments.
 

Jagger69

Three lullabies in an ancient tongue
Well fuck.

Some of Jagger's liberal friends would want to take him out to the woodshed over those comments.

More than You Might think actually concur with me. See....you can't make general assumptions about anyone on any given issue....even an unabashed libbie like me. I'm not someone who is prone to respond in a knee-jerk fashion without thinking beforehand.

To me, an easy and obvious solution would be to put a photo on your voter's registration card. Problem solved. In fact, prior to the passage of Texas' voter ID law, I didn't even have to show my voter's registration at all at the polling place. I simply stated who I was, where I lived and signed on the appropriate line. Ridiculous when you think about it. If any voter needs assistance to register to vote, that should be made available at no cost to them. Again, there's no legitimate excuse to not have proper identification, whether you possess a driver's license or not.
 

Mayhem

Banned
Appeals court rejects North Carolina's request to postpone voter ID decision

http://www.journalnow.com/news/elec...cle_e7eeb289-e736-5e2b-b966-44822db525fe.html

An appeals court has quickly decided it won't delay enforcement of its ruling striking down North Carolina's photo identification requirement and other election restrictions, including reducing early in-person voting by seven days.
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied the stay Thursday, one day after state leaders' attorneys requested that last week's ruling be set aside as they prepare to ask the U.S. Supreme Court to consider the case.
A 4th Circuit panel had determined a 2013 law Republicans approved amounted to intentional discrimination of black voters.
Thursday's order says the harm to disenfranchised voters outweighs granting a delay. Last week's injunction means no voter ID mandate and 17 days of early voting with same-day registration.
The state has other options to seek a delay.
 

Mayhem

Banned
Supreme Court Blocks Stricter Voting Rules in North Carolina

http://www.wsj.com/articles/supreme-court-blocks-stricter-voting-rules-in-north-carolina-1472673999
A divided Supreme Court on Wednesday rejected an emergency appeal by North Carolina seeking to revive stricter state voting rules, which reduced the number of days for early voting and required photo identification at the polls.

The high court, in a brief written order, declined to stay an appeals court ruling from July that struck down North Carolina’s Republican-backed voting rules. The appeals court found state lawmakers enacted the rules with the intent to discriminate against black voters.

North Carolina’s bid to restore the rules for Election Day split the short-handed Supreme Court along ideological lines, with four liberal justices rejecting the request and four conservative justices supporting the state. North Carolina needed the votes of five justices to win a stay.

The even split is the latest impact of conservative Justice Antonin Scalia’s February death and a political impasse over replacing him.

The Supreme Court’s action wasn’t a ruling on the merits but only about what voting rules should apply while North Carolina is contesting the appeals court ruling.


The case has been one of the most closely watched election law battles in the run-up to Election Day. North Carolina is a likely battleground state in the presidential race and also is home to hotly contested Senate and gubernatorial races.

North Carolina GOP lawmakers enacted the voting restrictions in 2013 after the Supreme Court nullified part of the Voting Rights Act that previously required a group of states, mostly in the South, to obtain preliminary approval before altering their electoral practices because of their history of discrimination.

In addition to requiring voters to present photo identification, the North Carolina law eliminated previous state rules that allowed citizens to register and vote on the same day during an early voting period, as well as to cast a ballot in a precinct other than the one to which they were assigned. The state law also reduced from 17 to 10 the number of days in which voters could cast a ballot early.

The Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Va., said the voting mechanisms targeted by the Republican-backed state law were used disproportionately by African-Americans, who overwhelmingly voted Democratic. The court labeled the effort “the most restrictive voting law North Carolina has seen since the era of Jim Crow.”

The appeals court also criticized North Carolina for accepting some forms of photo IDs but not others, such as identification cards held by people who received public assistance from the state.

In its emergency appeal to the Supreme Court, North Carolina said it shouldn’t be forced to dramatically alter its voting procedures so close to the election. The state said its tightened rules were in line with those of many other states and weren’t harming minority voters.

North Carolina hadn’t sought immediate restoration of all its intended procedures, saying it would allow same-day registration and out-of-precinct voting this time around.

Voters, civil-rights groups and the Justice Department all challenged the law.
They urged the Supreme Court not to restore the state law, saying minority voters would be irreparably harmed if the justices restored discriminatory voting procedures. They said North Carolina already had begun adapting its voting procedures to comply with the appeals court ruling and would have ample time to continue doing so.

“The Supreme Court was correct to deny North Carolina’s last-ditch effort to undermine African-American voter participation in the November election,” said Dale Ho, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Voting Rights Project.

North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory, a Republican, said the court’s action “denied basic voting rights already granted to more than 30 other states to protect the integrity of one person, one vote through a common-sense voter ID law.”
 

Mayhem

Banned
Appeals Court blocks Kansas, Alabama, Georgia on voter ID rule

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-voterid-idUSKCN11G020

A U.S. Court of Appeals on Friday blocked an effort by Alabama, Georgia and Kansas for voters to furnish proof of citizenship when registering at the polls, which opponents say disenfranchises voters, especially minorities.

The decision effectively strikes down a rule that requires voters in the three states to provide proof they are United States citizens. Elsewhere, voters only need swear that they are citizens in order to cast a ballot.

"With just weeks to go before a critical presidential election, we are grateful to the court of appeals for stopping this thinly veiled discrimination in its tracks," Chris Carson, president of the League of Women Voters, which had sued to block the new requirements, said in a statement.

Conservatives in Republican-controlled states have moved to tighten voter identification rules ahead of the Nov. 8 election.

Supporters say tougher rules help prevent fraud, but in-person voter impersonation on election day is virtually non-existent, a 2012 study at Arizona State University showed. Opponents, mostly Democrats, say the rules discriminate against minorities.

Seven percent of Americans do not have proof of U.S. citizenship such as a birth certificate, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law.

The Appeals Court of the District of Columbia said the League of Women Voters had shown there would be irreparable harm if the rule was permitted, and had also shown it was likely to win the case on its merits.

Alabama and Georgia, which passed provisions several years ago, have not implemented their laws while at least 20,000 voters in Kansas, where the law took effect in 2013, have been blocked from registering to vote, the League's lawyers say.
 
Requiring an ID to vote is not voter restriction, dumb fuck. If we were to poll every voting aged citizen in the USA, 95 percent would be able to produce some form of identification.

Libtards like you oppose voter ID for one simple reason, it allows for voter fraud, it allows it to go unchecked and undetected. If one person votes that should not, it taints the vote of a legitimate voter and that is unacceptable by any measure. You can claim that voter fraud is non existent by this research center or that university, but the fact remains that the potential is in place for it to happen.

Why does the left oppose identifying voters? There is not another aspect of life where the poor can participate, collect something or buy or sell something that effects the general public that doesn't require identification. If the poor benefit from something and an ID stands in their way from receiving it, voila! They can produce one.

If our border and welfare rolls were being flooded with white Europeans that were more likely to be of a conservative bent, special needs posters like Mayhem would be the first to call for positively identifying who is casting a vote.

So stick your claims of non existent voter fraud up your fat hemorrhoid infected ass as there is no way to prove it is not happening without identifying every voter which surpringly you oppose.

You are a god damn left wing idiot which means cheat, lie and steal your way to achieving your agenda if you have to. Changing demographics is the only way you can elect socialists and Marxists and so you'll continue to hold your breath until you get your way.

The best way to prove voter fraud exists is to put into place a system that discourages it and not encourages it. The results will cast light on the hanky panky at the polls and bring into question why the drastic change? Nah, you wouldn't want that now would you?

As for that figment of our imagination voter fraud...

http://www.google.com/url?q=http://...-80sSg&usg=AFQjCNEmzV4pu76Bs3L0pCs0UO_8YA8NxQ


You really are the dumbest motherfucker I have had the pleasure of encountering on any forum.
 

Mayhem

Banned
Supporters say tougher rules help prevent fraud, but in-person voter impersonation on election day is virtually non-existent, a 2012 study at Arizona State University showed.

Pussy. All I'm doing is copy/pasting articles from accredited news sources, but you have to lash out personally at me, like I'm the one who wrote it. Pussy. Play the victim. Pussy. Have a fake reason to be angry and afraid. Pussy. Have a fake reason to ignore the same Constitution that dear ol' Daddy swore to protect. Pussy. Have a fake reason to ignore the same Constitution that as a lawyer (excuse me while I laugh hysterically while simultaneously projectile vomiting) you claim to cherish. Pussy. Be afraid you pathetic Pussy. Hide under the bed Pussy. The Voter-Frauds are coming to get you Pussy. They're out there in the millions Pussy. They're the sole reason why your piece of shit candidate is going to lose to the only piece of shit candidate that he could lose to Pussy. They're the sole reason why your piece of shit candidate is going to lose quick enough for the evening news to report it Pussy. All the Voter-Frauds are going to make you cry like the Pussy that you are Pussy. All the Voter Frauds are going to steal your election Pussy. The courts are letting them do it Pussy. The same courts that as a lawyer (excuse me while I laugh hysterically while simultaneously projectile vomiting), you're supposed to respect and support Pussy. The COURTS are sanctioning the millions and millions of Voter Frauds Pussy. How does that make you feel Pussy? All those illegal immigrant Voter Frauds, waiting in their Borg alcoves, energizing for Election Day Pussy. And THE COURTS are letting them get away with it Pussy. Does it make you want to pick up a gun Pussy? Or perchance, a pair of pliers Pussy? Does all this make you want to post something that makes you feel less like a Pussy than you are Pussy?

You really are the dumbest motherfucker I have had the pleasure of continuously laughing at on any forum. Pussy.
 
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