When liberals decry voter-identification laws as tools for voter suppression, they aren’t arguing ex nihilo. The evidence is clear:
identification requirements for voting reduce turnout among low-income
and minority voters. And the particular restrictions imposed by repugican lawmakers—limiting the acceptable forms of identification,
ending opportunities for student voting, reducing hours for early
voting—certainly do appear aimed at Democratic voters.
Indeed, in a column
for wingnut clearinghouse WingNutDaily, longtime wingnut
activist Phyllis Schlafly acknowledged as much with a defense of North Carolina’s new voting law, which has been criticized for its restrictions on access, among other things. Here’s Schlafly:
“The reduction in the number of days allowed for early voting is particularly important because early voting plays a major role in Obama’s ground game. The Democrats carried most states that allow many days of early voting, and Obama’s national field director admitted, shortly before last year’s election, that ‘early voting is giving us a solid lead in the battleground states that will decide this election.’
“The Obama technocrats have developed an efficient system of identifying prospective Obama voters and then nagging them (some might say harassing them) until they actually vote. It may take several days to accomplish this, so early voting is an essential component of the Democrats’ get-out-the-vote campaign.”
She later adds that early voting “violates the spirit of the Constitution” and facilitates “illegal votes” that “cancel out the votes of honest Americans.” I’m not sure what she means by “illegal votes,” but it sounds an awful lot like voting by Democratic constituencies: students, low-income people, and minorities.
Schlafly,
it should be noted, isn’t the first repugican to confess the true
reason for voter-identification laws. Among friendly audiences, they
can’t seem to help it.
Last spring,
for example, Pennsylvania House Majority Leader Mike Turzai told a
gathering of repugicans that their voter identification law would
“allow Governor Romney to win the state of Pennsylvania.” That summer, at an event hosted by the Heritage Foundation, former Wall Street Journal
columnist John Fund conceded that Democrats had a point about the repugican cabal’s
focus on voter ID, as opposed to those measures—such as absentee
balloting—that are vulnerable to tampering. “I think it is a fair
argument of some liberals that there are some people who emphasize the
voter ID part more than the absentee ballot part because supposedly repugicans like absentee ballots more and they don’t want to restrict
that,” he said.
One could spend hours going through the abundant evidence that these laws are meant to discourage Democratic voting.
After the election, former Florida repugican cabal chairman Jim Greer told The Palm Beach Post
that the explicit goal of the state’s voter-ID law was Democratic
suppression. “The repugican cabal, the strategists, the consultants,
they firmly believe that early voting is bad for repugican cabal
candidates,” Greer told the Post. “It’s done for one reason and
one reason only ... ‘We’ve got to cut down on early voting because early
voting is not good for us,’” he said. Indeed, the Florida repugican cabal imposed a host of policies, from longer ballots to fewer precincts
in minority areas, meant to discourage voting. And it worked. According to one study, as many as 49,000 people were discouraged from voting in November 2012 as a result of long lines and other obstacles.
One
could spend hours going through the abundant evidence that these laws
are meant to discourage Democratic voting with burdens that harm blacks,
Latinos, and other disproportionately low-income groups. In 2011 an Associated Press analysis
found that South Carolina’s proposed voter-identification law would hit
black precincts the hardest, keeping thousands from casting
nonprovisional ballots. Likewise, if Alabama’s voter-ID law goes into
effect, it will place its largest burden on black voters who lack
acceptable forms of identification and don’t have immediate access to
alternatives. And while most of these laws—which, it’s worth noting,
have been passed in most of the states of the former Confederacy—provide
for free identification, it’s not an easy reach. To get one in Mississippi, for instance, residents need a birth certificate, which costs $15
and requires the photo identification they don’t have. They’ll also
need time to travel to the state office to pay or a computer to do the
transaction online.
For the one in five
Mississippians who live below the poverty line, there’s no guarantee of
the time to go to an office, a computer to access the website, or a
credit card to make the transaction. After all, more than 10 million
American households don’t have
bank accounts, and the large majority of them are low income. Most
voters will know the steps they need to get an ID. They just aren’t easy
to complete, and that’s the point.
So we should be thankful for Schlafly’s candor. The more repugicans acknowledge that these laws are designed to suppress the votes of blacks, Latinos, and others, the easier building a movement to stop them will be.
No comments:
Post a Comment