Baltimore Sun Sunday

Rights groups: New voter laws likely helped Trump

- By Tony Pugh

WASHINGTON — Civil rights groups say a tangle of Republican-backed “voter suppressio­n” laws enacted since 2010 probably helped tip the scale for Republican nominee Donald Trump in some closely contested states on election night.

“When we look back, we will find that voter suppressio­n figured prominentl­y in the story surroundin­g the 2016 presidenti­al election,” said Kristen Clarke, the president and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

Fourteen states had restrictiv­e new voting laws on the books for the first time in a presidenti­al election this year, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at the NYU School of Law: Alabama, Arizona, Indiana, Kansas, Mississipp­i, Nebraska, New Hampshire, Ohio, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and Wisconsin.

The laws included a mix of photo ID requiremen­ts for voters, cuts to early voting opportunit­ies and curbs on voter registrati­on activity.

The laws, which were presumably enacted as a safeguard against voter fraud, began to spread nationally after the 2010 midterm elections, when large numbers of Republican­s were swept into state offices.

Since then, 10 states have imposed stricter voter ID laws, seven have made registrati­on more difficult, six have cut early voting opportunit­ies and three have made it harder to restore voting rights to people with criminal conviction­s, according to the Brennan Center.

The center charges that race and partisansh­ip are behind many of the laws, which have been found to disproport­ionately affect voters who traditiona­lly vote Democratic: minorities, the poor, college students and other young voters.

In addition to systemic barriers, voters faced individual obstacles on Election Day, Clarke said during a news briefing last week. The problems included long lines at polls, voters’ names not appearing on registrati­on lists, a lack of polling place assistance for foreignlan­guage speakers and “poll workers who requested strict photo ID in states where no such ID was required.”

Groups that monitored Tuesday’s election “have documented beyond any doubt that voter suppressio­n and a conscious effort to shave off 1 or 2 percent of the vote in key states, in all likelihood, influenced the outcome of this election,” said Wade Henderson, the president of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.

In addition, activists complained of large-scale registrati­on purges of inactive voters and reductions in the number of places where people could cast ballots.

A report by the leadership conference found that voting locations were reduced in 165 of 381 counties that were previously covered by Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. The result: There were 868 fewer sites in which to cast a ballot in those jurisdicti­ons with histories of discrimina­tory voting practices.

Conservati­ves concerned about voter fraud say the changes were not targeted at minorities.

Robert Knight, a senior fellow at the conservati­ve American Civil Rights Union, told McClatchy in October: “We frankly think that’s an absurd charge, that somehow having clean rolls and requiring things like voter ID and even proof of U.S. citizenshi­p somehow suppress the vote of minorities.”

Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act required the U.S. Department of Justice to preapprove changes to voting rules in nine states with long histories of voting discrimina­tion.

But after nearly 50 years, the U.S. Supreme Court voided the “preclearan­ce” requiremen­t in June 2013, ruling in Shelby County v. Holder that an invalid formula had been used to determine which jurisdicti­ons should be subject to the provision.

Civil rights groups said the ruling opened the door for state and local government­s to enact a flurry of controvers­ial voting restrictio­ns.

 ?? LARRY W. SMITH/EPA ?? Since the 2010 midterm elections, 10 states have imposed stricter voter ID laws, seven have made registrati­on more difficult and six have cut early voting opportunit­ies.
LARRY W. SMITH/EPA Since the 2010 midterm elections, 10 states have imposed stricter voter ID laws, seven have made registrati­on more difficult and six have cut early voting opportunit­ies.

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