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Why Voter ID Is Racial Discrimination, for the Record [CityLab.com]

 

A panel of 15 judges for the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled 9-6 Wednesday that a photo voter-ID law passed by Texas almost five years ago discriminates against people of color. The Texas law, SB 14, would allow the use of drivers licenses and gun licenses to vote, but not college IDs. Experts testified in the years-long court battle over the law that it would potentially disenfranchise upwards of 600,000 eligible voters.

Most of the disenfranchised would be Latino and African-American voters who are unable to get the ID cards required to vote due to poverty, lack of transportation, and the state’s overall history of racism at the polls. This is why a district court ruled last year that the voter ID law violated the federal Voting Rights Act, as it did in 2012. Those cases were appealed, but Wednesday’s ruling from the Fifth Circuit appeals court mostly upholds those findings.



[For more of this story, written by Brentin Mock, go to http://www.citylab.com/politic...n-the-record/492347/]

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Perhaps the Texas law also discriminates against elderly voters, too: Former U.S. House Speaker Jim Wright tried to vote in Texas, last election ... as well as a retired Federal Judge ... according to press coverage I'd seen.

One of the "Founding Fathers" was reported to have noted: Rights become duties by reciprocity: "My Rights are only as secure, as my interest in guaranteeing that Right to others, and hopefully, they to me."

Last edited by Robert Olcott
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