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Home Front: Politix
DC Judges Grill Texas AG on Voter ID
2012-07-14
On Friday morning, Judge Robert L. Wilkins looked out across the packed courtroom at the lawyer for Texas and suggested that the state's voter ID law would force some people to travel more than 100 miles to get the documents required for a photo identification."How does that impact your argument?" asked Wilkins. "Isn't that unduly burdensome?"
Have you already formed a conclusion, yerhonor?
John Hughes, the state's attorney, said Texans in rural areas are used to driving long distances. "People who want to vote already have an ID or can easily get it," he said.
It's 99 miles to the WallMart, yerhonor, it's not but another 10-12 miles to the Voter ID store.
Just load up an extra six twelve-pack of roadies...
Texas has a history of voter discrimination and a more recent history against conservatives, so the law signed last year by its Republican governor, Rick Perry, had to be cleared by the Justice Department. The department blocked the law, saying it would disproportionately affect Latino voters. Texas sued the department, leading to the week-long trial that ended Friday. For the Obama administration, the Texas law and similar legislation passed in other states threaten to disenfranchise millions of Latino and African American voters. But for supporters of the legislation, the requirements are common-sense solutions to voter fraud.

In his closing argument, Justice lawyer Matthew Colangelo said that the Texas law will disenfranchise more than a million African American and Hispanic voters and "is exactly the type of law" that Congress had in mind when it passed the Voting Rights Act.
If everyone is required to get an ID, and everyone is equally burdened, then no one is disenfranchised...
Republican lawmakers have argued that the voter ID law is needed to clean up voter rolls, which they say are filled with the names of illegal immigrants, ineligible felons and the deceased. Texas, they argue, is asking for no more identification than people need to board an airplane, get a library card or enter many government buildings.

On Thursday, Harvard University political science professor Stephen Ansolabehere, an elections and statistics expert, testified for the Justice Department that the Texas law was more likely to affect Hispanic and black voters than white ones. Texas lawyers countered that Ansolabehere's research methods were "hopelessly flawed," and said a list he produced of 1.5 million potential Texas voters without state-issued IDs was inaccurate.

The lawyers showed that Ansolabehere's list included Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R), former president George W. Bush and former senator Phil Gramm (R).
All well-known Republicans, yerhonor! Do we hafta count them, too?
Posted by:Bobby

#2  To access the free boodle tuition, one needs to download the forms and apply. To download the forms, one needs a PIN. To get a PIN, one needs an ID card. To get an ID card, one needs.......

Klik
Posted by: Besoeker   2012-07-14 12:31  

#1  When el liberal gabachos finish handing the border states over to Mexicano Nationales with their own Presidios will la gringos be allowed to have their own Reservations?

Viva Mexico! /sarque
Posted by: wr   2012-07-14 11:11  

00:00