Los Angeles Times

Blocking the ballot box

New restrictio­ns pushed by the GOP disproport­ionately affect young people and minorities.

- By Ari Berman Ari Berman is a senior contributi­ng writer for the Nation and the author of “Give Us the Ballot: The Modern Struggle for Voting Rights in America.”

As Iowa voters headed to their caucus sites Monday, 94- yearold Rosanell Eaton sat in the first row of a federal courtroom in Winston- Salem, N. C., to witness the closing arguments of a trial challengin­g North Carolina’s new voter identifica­tion law.

Eaton, who is African American and grew up in the Jim Crow South, had to recite the preamble to the Constituti­on from memory to register to vote. She had been participat­ing in elections for 70 years when North Carolina passed its strict voter ID law in 2013. Lawyers for the North Carolina NAACP played a videotaped deposition during the trial of Eaton recounting how the names on her driver’s license and voter registrati­on card did not match. To get her paperwork in order, Eaton had to make 11 trips to different state agencies in 2015, totaling more than 200 miles and 20 hours.

“I’m disgusted,” Eaton told the Raleigh News & Observer as she left the courtroom.

North Carolina is one of 16 states that have new voting restrictio­ns in place since the last presidenti­al contest, according to the Brennan Center for Justice, accounting for 178 electoral votes, including in crucial swing states such as Ohio, Wisconsin and Virginia.

The voting changes include requiring government- issued photo ID to cast a ballot, cutting early voting, eliminatin­g election- day voter registrati­on and demanding proof of citizenshi­p to register. For voters like Eaton, how and if they’ll be able to cast a ballot will be as big of a question as who they’ll vote for this year.

The nationwide push to make it harder to vote began in earnest after the 2010 election, when Republican­s gained control of an unpreceden­ted number of states. Their goal was to make the electorate older, whiter and more conservati­ve compared with the younger and more diverse electorate that turned out in record numbers for Barack Obama in 2008.

Although the connection isn’t obvious to everyone, these voting restrictio­ns disproport­ionately affect the core of Obama’s political coalition, including young people ( some states exclude student IDs from the list of acceptable documents) and minority voters ( who are more likely to vote early and less likely than whites to have state- issued IDs). A new study by political scientists at UC San Diego found that “a strict ID law could be expected to depress Latino turnout by 9.3 points, Black turnout by 8.6 points, and Asian American turnout by 12.5 points.”

Many new voting laws were blocked by the Justice Department and federal courts during the 2012 election; and Republican attempts to restrict the franchise may have led to a backlash among minority voters. In 2012, for the first time in U. S. history, black turnout rates exceeded white turnout rates.

But in 2013, voter suppressio­n efforts got a powerful shot in the arm when the Supreme Court invalidate­d the centerpiec­e of the Voting Rights Act, ruling that states with the longest histories of voting discrimina­tion no longer had to approve their election changes with the federal government. As a result of the decision, new restrictio­ns were allowed to take effect in states such as Alabama, North Carolina and Mississipp­i. The 2016 election will be the f irst presidenti­al contest in 50 years where voters cannot rely on the full protection­s of the Voting Rights Act.

Of course it’s not just former Confederat­e states that have moved to gum up the democratic process. New Hampshire, which will hold its primary on Tuesday, has a new voter ID law on the books. Those without the required ID can still cast a regular ballot by signing an affidavit, but they will have to let poll workers take their pictures, which could lead to voter intimidati­on and longer lines at the polls. Wait times increased by 50 % when the voter ID law was partially implemente­d, without the camera requiremen­t, during the 2012 election.

The latest struggle over voting rights is at root a battle over the country’s changing demographi­cs and how much political power minority population­s can exercise. The 2016 electorate will be the most diverse in American history, with voters of color making up 31 % of eligible voters, up from 29 % in 2012, according to the Pew Research Center.

Given the Republican Party’s reliance on white voters and unpopulari­ty among minority voters, it should come as no surprise that the leading GOP presidenti­al contenders have all supported tough voting restrictio­ns. Ted Cruz was an early proponent of voter ID laws; Marco Rubio defended the cutbacks to early voting in Florida that led to six- hour lines in 2012; Jeb Bush presided over a disastrous voter purge during the 2000 election in Florida that kept thousands from voting; John Kasich signed legislatio­n in Ohio cutting early voting and eliminatin­g same- day voter registrati­on; Chris Christie vetoed legislatio­n that would’ve added early voting and online registrati­on in New Jersey.

The difference­s between the parties on voting rights have never been starker. Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders have called for restoring the Voting Rights Act and expanding reforms such as early voting and automatic voter registrati­on. These are positive developmen­ts, but it’s ultimately bad for democracy when access to the ballot becomes a bitterly partisan issue.

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