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BREAKING: Justice Department Blocks South Carolina’s Voter ID Law

BREAKING: Justice Department Blocks South Carolina’s Voter ID Law

Updated: Dec. 23, 2011, 5:28PM

The U.S. Department of Justice will block the voter ID provisions of an election law passed in South Carolina earlier this year because the state’s own statistics demonstrated that the photo identification requirement would have a much greater impact on non-white residents, DOJ said in a letter to the state on Friday.

The decision places the federal government squarely in opposition to the types of voter ID requirements that have swept through mostly Republican-controlled state legislatures.

Officials in DOJ’s Civil Rights Division found a significant racial disparity in the data provided by South Carolina, which must have changes to its election laws precleared under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, because of past history of discrimination. The data demonstrated that registered non-white voters were 20 percent more likely than white voters to lack the specific type of photo identification required to exercise their constitutional rights, according to a letter sent to South Carolina and obtained by TPM.

“Put differently, although non-white voters comprised 30.4% of the state’s registered voters, they constituted 34.2% of registered voters who did not have the requisite DMV-issued identification to vote,” Assistant Attorney General Thomas E. Perez, who heads the Civil Rights Division, wrote in the letter to South Carolina. “Non-white voters were therefore disproportionally represented, to a significant degree, in the group of registered voters who, under the proposed law, would be rendered ineligible to go to the polls and participate in the election.”

Perez wrote that the number of minority citizens whose exercise of the francise could be adversely affected by the proposed requirements “runs in the tens of thousands.” He wrote that the state had “failed entirely to address the disparity between the proportions of white and non-white registered voters who lack DMV-issued identification.”

Because Justice Department lawyers reached the conclusion that South Carolina’s voter ID law would have the effect of suppressing minority voter turnout, they found it was unnecessary to examine whether that was the intent of the legislators who voted for the law. Cases based on intent to discriminate are usually more difficult to prove even though they don’t require the government to prove the effect was discriminatory.

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley (R) signed the bill into law in May and even offered voters free rides to the DMV to obtain the photo ID required to cast a ballot. It also got the backing of Sen. Lindsey Graham (R) who called voter ID laws the “future of the country” while calling on Congress to pass a federal voter ID law.

The Justice Department’s decision will undoubtably have huge political ramifications. Its decision will come as good news to Democrats and voting rights advocates like the Brennan Center’s Keesha Gaskins, who wrote in a blog post that having DOJ deny “preclearance for South Carolina’s discriminatory voter ID law” was all she wanted for Christmas. Despite Attorney General Eric Holder’s speech encouraging Americans to find ways to expand access to the polls, civil rights leaders say DOJ hasn’t done enough to stop laws which would do just the opposite. They are still pushing DOJ to pursue action against other states with voter ID laws not covered under Section 5.

For the mostly conservative backers of voter ID measures, it’ll be a different story. Supporters of voter ID laws — like those who write editorials for the Wall Street Journal — have argued that DOJ should approve the law because the Department cleared Georgia’s voter ID law in 2005. What they leave out is that officials in the Bush administration approved the law over the objections of career staffers in the Voting Section who believed Georgia’s law was discriminatory. (The Justice Department Inspector General found that Bradley Schlozman had politicized the Voting Section during the Bush administration, while an Obama-Biden transition team report found that the “politicization of legal analyses and case decisions at the expense of sound law enforcement” in the Voting Section during the Bush administration was “particularly egregious.”)

DOJ’s announcement came on Friday afternoon because they were required to respond to South Carolina by Tuesday of next week and Monday is a federal holiday. It marked the third time the Justice Department weighed in on a voter ID law: officials previously blocked a voter ID law in Louisiana in 1994.

So what’s next? That’s up to South Carolina. If the state does nothing, the voter ID provisions of the law are kaput. Alternatively, they can provide new data (they told DOJ 55 days into the 60 day review period that the data they originally turned over was flawed) and ask for reconsideration, pass a new and different law (perhaps with less stringent identification requirements) or they can sue and try their luck in court. The Supreme Court upheld Indiana’s voter ID law in 2008, so South Carolina might like its chances, though the question of racial disparity wasn’t the focus of the court’s decision.

Justice Department Letter To South Carolina Blocking Voter ID Law

Bradley Schlozman, DOJ, DOJ Civil Rights Division, Justice Department, South Carolina, Voter Identification, Voter suppression, Voting, Voting Rights Act, voter fraud, voter intimidation
Ryan J. Reilly

Ryan J. Reilly is a D.C.-based reporter for TPM. Prior to joining TPM, he worked for a news website covering the Justice Department and was a researcher for Bloomberg News. His email address is ryan(at)talkingpointsmemo.com.

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dugfrmjamul 10 pts

"Badges?

We ain't got no badges.

We don't need no badges!

I don't have to show you any stinkin' badges!"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VqomZQMZQCQ

smarish 13 pts

Why does it feel like pulling teeth to get Dems to do what we elected them to do? Is it just me that feels like they are a bunch of wusses until it seems like the public opinion will come crashing down on them? How about our Dem officials growing a pair????

This comment has been deleted
Mickey Bitsko 10581 pts

Flyinq Squid So sez a weasel who hijacks another poster's screen name.

anonq 38 pts

Sadly the Statists have been able to pollute the meaning of words so badly one can't even be sure what a liberal or conservative actually is. I would consider myself in some ways a Classical Liberal in the Libertarian sense - Which value limited government, constitutionalism, rule of law, due process, and liberty of individuals including freedom of religion, speech, press, assembly, and free markets. The world "Liberal" unfortunately, has been polluted so badly by the "progressive" movement at this point that Modern American Liberalism means a mixed economy with heavy government intervention into markets, the welfare state, and socialist agendas bordering on communism. The founding fathers of this country were mostly Classical Liberals -- they rebelled against unjust taxation, and implemented a constitution valuing freedom, natural rights and individual sovereignty; and imposed limitations on the federal government's powers. By today's standards, they would probably be considered "Conservatives" or be blasted by the left as "right wing nutjobs" and "teabaggers". Modern day Liberals are really a fascist authoritative body pushing the dichotomy of the left wing vs. the right wing authoritative perspective. In the end, they both embrace the Statist mentality which believes the state should be the moral ruler and dictate what people should and shouldn't be allowed to do. Modern Liberals only believe in rights if it's rights that THEY approve of. They value gay rights, not because people should be free to do they want, but because they "say" you have a right to be gay. Yet they will restrict your right to own firearms, because it's a right that they don't agree with. They quite often contradict themselves and make little sense. They push for gay marriage while ignoring that if it wasn't for the State's monopoly on marriage licenses, the issue wouldn't even exist; as free market competition with the government in the issuance of marriage licenses would meet the demand of gay people who choose to get married. Their "right" would not be determined by legalities and the people would not be subjected to mob rule of the voting majority, but by the individual sovereign rights possessed by the individual.

anonq 38 pts

In the end, their agenda pushes for a bureaucratic Nanny State where you have to get approval, go through procedures, and pay money to the government to exercise the "right" that they claim you have. A true (classical) liberal understands that your rights are created by birth (or granted to you by your Creator, if you believe in God) and that no government shall have the right to regulate, legislate or rule over the natural rights that every human poses as being a living sentient being. In the end, modern day liberals and neo-con establishment Statists destroy the concept of personal liberty and the right of self-ownership, by dictating that you should live as they see fit, and not as you've determined is best for you based on the knowledge you currently posses. Ron Paul is the only person running for President of the United States that truly understands the above concepts.

dugfrmjamul 10 pts

anonq For the 'Liberty Movement' to move forward Ron Paul must step aside for a younger lest 'racist' spokesperson.

Captain Crunch 655 pts

anonq Ron Paul is the only person running for President of the United States that truly understands the above concepts.

Ron Paul appears to be a bigoted, racist isolationist! Those are NOT qualifications to be POTUS. I take him at his word that he won't run for Congress again, so by the end of 2012, we are DONE with him!

maezeppa 15 pts

That is the most idiotic palaver I've stumbled upon today.

Randy Abraham 523 pts

anonq If I were you I would not be so quick to claim a monopoly on support for individual rights, or to claim liberals only care about certain rights, or suggest that modern liberals revere the founding fathers less than you do. I remember when the American Civil Liberties Union defended the right of a neonazi group to march in the Jewish community of Skokie, Illinois. Also, in the early 1990s Sen. Ted Kennedy, a liberal lion, called for an investigation into a federal raid that resulted in the death of a few family members of an anti-tax anti-government figure. It might have been the Rudy Ridge case.

Flying Squid 23795 pts

Randy Abrahamanonq Well I sure as hell don't revere the founding fathers. Half of them owned slaves, most of them thought women shouldn't vote, none of them knew about things like relativity and evolution or even the laws of thermodynamics.

Randy Abraham 523 pts

@Flying Squid anonq
Agree on your points about slavery and women's rights, but they were able to come together and hammer out a system of self-government that has endured and evolved to transcend the narrow socio-economic realities of their times. This was undoubtedly a landmark accomplishment.

As far as relativity, that had to wait until Einstein, but as children of the Enlightenment, I imagine they at least had an inkling of the scientific discoveries underway on the Continent. And then there was Franklin, who was keen on scientific experimentation.

Flying Squid 23795 pts

Randy Abrahamanonq Sure. They did something amazing. That doesn't mean I revere them. The Founding Father fetishism in this country is just bizarre, as if they had some sort of godlike powers.

Randy Abraham 523 pts

@Flying Squid anonq Maybe revere wasn't the best word. I was responding to Anonq's claim that today's liberals would reject the founding fathers as "right wing nut jobs" or "teabaggers." I don't mean to fetishize them, but I also recognize that they had to operate in the political ralities of their times, and so made compromises at least as far as institutionalized slavery.

Mainly, I was responding to the conceit and claim of today's "conservatives" that they alone are true to the spirit of the constitution.

steve davis 362 pts

Randy Abrahamanonq@flying Not only Franklin. Jefferson certainly. Others almost certainly. As you say, they were children of the enlightenment. That meant they were positivists. They would have assumed that if there were a God, he no doubt had designed the system to mostly run itself, and if the system were designed to run itself, it would have had a mechanism built in that would lead to the improvement of people's lives, mostly through technological advancement.

Gojiiro 46 pts

Rebublickn ideas are as good as avocado ice cream. No one's buying it, so they resort to voter suppression.

dugfmjamul 72 pts

Gojiiro You do know that the court system has ruled that photo id laws are not voter suppression, right?

eldlazar 704 pts

dugfmjamulGojiiro

Which court was that? Which case? Citations, please.

cognachas4paws 4349 pts

eldlazardugfmjamulGojiiro ONE Supreme Court case - about Indiana. He fails to tell you that the reason the SC ruled in favor of Indiana was because the state offered provisional ballots that could be mailed in if they did not have the paperwork required for a photo ID from the government, or if they could not get to the DMV for an ID.

He doesn't understand "context." Nor does he understand that a ruling by the SC about one state's laws does not mean the South Carolina law is constitutional, or that any other state photo ID laws are constitutional.

dugfmjamul 72 pts

eldlazarGojiiro Don't you follow this thread? I have already posted them, just scroll down and look.

dugfmjamul 72 pts

cognachas4pawseldlazarGojiiro Wrong....check again...

cognachas4paws 4349 pts

dugfmjamuleldlazarGojiiro I quit following it when you took it over with your endless "seditious progressive democrat (or was it liberal?)" pronouncements.

Do you get paid every time you type that phrase?

eldlazar 704 pts

dugfmjamulGojiiro

I've followed every citation I've seen of yours. Since you are nowhere near the top of what I'm doing today, I might have missed it. But the citations I see you making are so poor as to be laughable.

eldlazar 704 pts

dugfmjamulGojiiro

As typical, you did not actually give a citation, you merely said there was one. What court? What case? This should be easy stuff for a self-professed genius.

dugfrmjamul 10 pts

eldlazardugfmjamulGojiiro What's laughable is how you became so indoctrinated that you no longer have your god given common sense........ha...ha...ha...now quit being such a rock.

dugfrmjamul 10 pts

eldlazar What' the point? You would just poo-poo them away, ideologues such as yourself could never be objective enough to make honest comments on anything that would go against there political dogma.

But here is a test question to measure your honesty, what color is blue?

Gojiiro 46 pts

dugfmjamulGojiiro Now you offer up a peppermint curry with a hint of sage response. How sad for you and your old party. If you had any ideas that appealed to voters you wouldn't want to suppress the vote. Instead you want to narrow the voting pool to old white males - preferably land owners only. Something say like in the 19th Century.

dugfrmjamul 10 pts

Gojiirodugfmjamul Not true, I don't want non-citizens to vote. If lazy ass Americans can't get off the ass and wait in line at the DMV like the rest of US [most cases only once] then they don't get to vote. Civic Duty is not released from a poor person, just because they are poor.

Maggyw519 134 pts

dugfmjamulGojiiro READ the article.

Flying Squid 23795 pts

Gojiiro Nah, I'd actually try avocado ice cream.

RobBlew 80 pts

i really wonder what's next, they only have another year to f*k things up even more.

dugfmjamul 72 pts

RobBlew Correct, but just how bad can Obama make the economy?

RobBlew 80 pts

as bad as the republican can make it

dugfmjamul 72 pts

RobBlew Yep, it would really bad if the border were secured with Mexico, China dealt with, Iran not getting a Nuke, Keystone built and millions of new jobs created due to businesses having faith in government once again to do the right thing, lowering taxes and reduce government spending but most of all a return to constitutional government...yep that would be really bad........

RobBlew 80 pts

u got the talking points down, but all i see is more destruction of life, liberty and the persuit of happiness which u so proudly boast about.

dugfmjamul 72 pts

RobBlew And you really think 'genuine-socialism' thru 'enlighten-despotism' is the answer?

RobBlew 80 pts

dugfmjamul your kind of rule id rather do without

dugfmjamul 72 pts

RobBlew Yes, we all know you don't support 'Republicanism'. The Constitution is so outdated to an enlighten class of people, correct?

RobBlew 80 pts

dugfmjamul enlightened? u just cant get over the fact america is a progressive country not a regressive idealism.

dugfmjamul 72 pts

RobBlew America is a conservative country, what polls have you been reading? This years Gallup Poll showed most Americas considered themselves conservative by 41% while only around 21% said they were liberal.

The only reason progressives weld so much power is because the control the lame stream media, the educational system and the government. That's why they need the non-citizen voter to keep them in power because most of America are indeed conservative and if only citizens were voting the democrats would lose power and the government with it.

RobBlew 80 pts

dugfmjamul certainly not your polls

RobBlew 80 pts

dugfmjamul yeah thats why we have to have the biggest truck or smoke the best cigar, or maybe have the largest home or wear the nicest suits, your thought process is terribly flawed.

scolantonio10 9 pts

dugfmjamulRobBlew The poll also revealed that when asked about how they felt about a variety of issues, these so called conservatives demonstrated liberal leanings. Conservatives--wake up, you don't even understand your own talking points.

dugfmjamul 72 pts

scolantonio10 Nope, it just means some conservatives are confused. How can I blame them, they are bombarded with so much progressive propaganda from the lame stream media some of it is bound to rub off.

dugfmjamul 72 pts

RobBlew You need to take a better look at what Pelosi, Boxer, Feinstein, and the rest of the democrats in congress are wearing then get back to me.

Hobbes83 4553 pts

dugfmjamulRobBlew It the Constitution hater, back again to troll up the thread and spread his hatred of this country around.

cognachas4paws 4349 pts

dugfmjamulscolantonio10 No, it just means you're cherry picking things to get them to support your arguments while ignoring the data that shows that there is, indeed, discrimination among minorities when it comes to photo identification at polling places and that these laws are designed to make that discrimination "legal."

dugfmjamul 72 pts

Hobbes83RobBlew You are projecting your own hatred of the constitution...you are not fooling anyone.

Hobbes83 4553 pts

dugfmjamulRobBlew You must spend a fortune on large hats with the huge ego that you have.

dugfmjamul 72 pts

cognachas4pawsscolantonio10 'cherry picking', that's progressive code for you're right but I can't admit your right because it goes against the progressive code book...aka 'Rules of Radicals'.

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