If Upheld, Evidence Shows That Texas Vote Suppression Law Will Disenfranchise 600,000 Voters
On Monday, a U.S. District Court heard closing
arguments in the case that challenges the most militant and vicious vote
suppression law in America. Various groups including The Lawyers’
Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the Brennan Center for Justice,
the NAACP and the Mexican American Legislative Caucus of the Texas House
of Representatives were joined by the Department of Justice and private
organizations in a consolidation of challenges to this heinous vote
suppression law.
Opponents of Texas’ vote suppression law pointed to
hard evidence that the law will disenfranchise 600,000 Texas voters.
Adding insult to injury, taxpayers are paying for this court battle with
tax dollars. Some of those taxpayers are the very people Greg Abbott
is fighting to disenfranchise.
The Lawyers Committee For Civil Rights Under the Law
is one of the parties challenging the vote suppression law. Their
lawyer, Ezra Rosenberg, pointed to hard numbers that prove this law will
disenfranchise 600,000 racial minority voters in Texas.
The statistics reveal:
- .Blacks and Hispanics are between 1.6 times to 4 times less likely than Whites to have SB 14 ID, and
- Approximately 4% of all registered voters, or approximately 600,000 registered voters, lack SB 14 ID.
While the stats show the adverse effect on racial
minorities is extreme, that in itself doesn’t prove there was a
discriminatory intent behind the law. Since racial minorities
overwhelmingly vote Democrat, there could be wiggle room for Abbott’s
claim that this law is about partisan based discrimination and vote
suppression.
However, Rosenberg took care of that problem with
six witnesses from the legislature who testified to the discriminatory
intent of the law.
When you consider this evidence along with the fact
that repugican lawmakers opposed proposed amendments that would have
broadened the list of acceptable ID, it’s all but impossible for a court
to accept that disenfranchising so many voters is really about
protecting the integrity of the vote. More so, when you consider that in
person voter fraud is statistically non-existent in Texas and in every
other state.
Abbott concedes that this law suppresses the vote.
He insists the discriminatory intent is based on party preference rather
than race and besides it’s justified to stop voter fraud. Even though
there is a great chance of seeing an UFO than an occurrence of in person
voter fraud.
He did try to bring in the Koch backed unTrue the Vote to spin a story about rampant voter fraud , but the court wouldn’t have it.
Greg Abbott did not produce a single legislative
proponent of the law to substantiate his claim about the legislative
intent perhaps because he couldn’t find someone willing to lie to the
court.
It’s possible that Abbott remains confident that
when the Supreme Court gutted the strongest deterrent against raced
based vote suppression, it gave the repugicans a license to suppress
votes by minorities. Abbot might have believed that he can hoodwink the
courts into believing that the indisputably adverse effect of this law
on minority voters is just a coincidence when the discrimination in this
law is purely on partisan grounds. Sure, and we believe in the tooth
fairy too!
The combination of stats and testimony by witnesses
from the legislature who are in a position to know why repugican
lawmakers were so determined to disenfranchise hundreds of thousands of
Texans makes it difficult for Abbott to spin or charm his way around the
evidence. He can’t rely on the court deferring to an honorable
legislature because of that testimony. He can’t claim that there is a
state interest because the law intends to stop in person voter fraud,
where in person voter fraud is statistically non-existent. The best he
had was the manufactured numbers that unTrue the Vote was sure to
provide. However, the court saw through that maneuver.
The fact that unTrue the Vote tried to intervene at
the last minute shows even Abbott recognizes he was overly confident
that the court would just take him at his word.
The court, located in Corpus Christi, gave no indication of when it expects to issue its ruling in this case.
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