San Diego Union-Tribune

JUDGE TO HALT N.C. VOTER ID MANDATE

Critics say law disproport­ionately affects black voters

- BY GARY D. ROBERTSON

RALEIGH, N.C.

Republican attempts to require photo identifica­tion to vote in North Carolina are being thwarted again by judges hearing arguments that the mandate is tainted by bias that would deter black and Latino residents.

A federal court announced that next week U.S. District Judge Loretta Biggs will formally block a photo ID requiremen­t scheduled to begin in 2020. Unless the upcoming preliminar­y injunction is successful­ly appealed, the requiremen­t will be halted until a lawsuit filed by the state NAACP and others is resolved.

Thursday’s short written notice from the federal court in Winston-salem previewed Biggs’ order because state election officials were planning to expand efforts to educate voters about the ID law within days. Although the requiremen­t would be carried out beginning with the March 3 primary, the requiremen­t would actually start in just a few weeks with mail-in absentee ballot filers, who also would have to provide an ID copy.

The state law identified several types of qualifying photo IDS and allowed people lacking one to get a free ID card or to fill out a form while voting explaining their “reasonable impediment” to obtaining one.

GOP leaders in charge of the legislatur­e have been trying for most of the decade to advance voter ID, saying that more than 30 states require it and it builds confidence in elections. Data show voter impersonat­ion is rare, however. The voting pool — currently 6.8 million registered voters — is critical in a closely divided presidenti­al battlegrou­nd state where statewide races are often competitiv­e between the major parties.

Voter ID was actually carried out in North Carolina’s 2016 primary elections as the result of a 2013 law. But a federal appeals court struck down several portions of the law in July 2016, saying photo ID and other voting restrictio­ns were approved with intentiona­l racial discrimina­tion in mind.

Republican­s strongly disagreed with that decision and later put a question on the November 2018 ballot enshrining voter ID in the state constituti­on — a strategy designed to give the idea more legal and popular standing. The amendment passed with 55 percent of the vote. The legislatur­e approved a separate law in December 2018 detailing how to implement that amendment. Lawsuits challengin­g that new law were filed immediatel­y.

Lawyers for the state and local NAACP chapters told Biggs in a court brief that the latest version of voter ID is a “barely disguised duplicate” of the 2013 voter ID law and “carries the same discrimina­tory intent as its predecesso­r,” likely violating the U.S. Constituti­on.

The new rules allow additional government IDS to meet the requiremen­t, including public and private university cards. But they still prevent government IDS for public assistance programs from being used, disproport­ionately affecting African Americans, the NAACP said.

The actual reasons for Biggs issuing the injunction — and whether the legislatur­e could quickly pass a law altering the rules to resolve her concerns — won’t be known until her detailed order is released.

Biggs was appointed to the bench by President Barack Obama in 2014.

The Rev. T. Anthony Spearman, president of the state NAACP, praised Biggs’ decision, calling the 2018 measure “the latest bad-faith attempt in a string of failed efforts by the (North Carolina) General Assembly to impede the right to vote of African Americans and Latinos in this state, and to blunt the force of the true will of the people.”

Republican House Speaker Tim Moore of Cleveland County criticized the notice Friday as a “last-minute attempt by an activist federal judge to overturn the will of North Carolina voters.” He said the ruling should be “immediatel­y appealed” by the State Board of Elections, which is a defendant in the case. The board is composed of three Democrats and two Republican­s, all appointed by Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper. Although a voter ID opponent, Cooper is also named a lawsuit defendant because of his position as governor.

Lawyers from the state Department of Justice represente­d the board in court to attempt to uphold the 2018 voter ID law. They argued that the rules were improved to address previous concerns of bias and the plaintiffs failed to show it was enacted with discrimina­tory intent. Cooper vetoed the December 2018 law, but two Democratic legislator­s joined all Republican­s voting to override the veto.

The department declined to comment Friday about a possible appeal as it awaits Biggs’ full order.

Robertson writes for The Associated Press.

 ?? ETHAN HYMAN AP ?? The Rev. T. Anthony Spearman, president of the North Carolina NAACP, crumples up a mailer that tells voters IDS are needed in the upcoming 2020 election during a news conference Friday in Raleigh, N.C.
ETHAN HYMAN AP The Rev. T. Anthony Spearman, president of the North Carolina NAACP, crumples up a mailer that tells voters IDS are needed in the upcoming 2020 election during a news conference Friday in Raleigh, N.C.

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