The impact of North Carolina's voter 'ID' law has already been felt.
This impact will only grow more marked as it will be even tougher for
minorities to vote …
In Greensboro, one of North Carolina’s largest
cities, voters waited for hours to vote. At North Carolina A&T
University, a historically black university, many African-American
students were told they could not vote because they were in the wrong
precinct; their mailing address did not match their dorm address and
thus, did not match the voting rolls; and students were misled as to
where to vote by mailers sent by super-PACs supporting repugican
candidates.
I personally waited close to an hour to vote in
Winston-Salem, another one of North Carolina’s historically
Democratic-leaning cities, and, at this location, African-Americans were repeatedly told it would be a two-hour wait.
All of these problems add up to fewer people voting,
and election results skewered towards repugicans, who designed the
laws. According to Weiser, in 2010, 200,000 voters cast ballots during
the early voting days, which were cut by Tillis’s law. In 2012, 700,000
voted during those days; this number accounted for more than a quarter
of all of the votes cast African-Americans that year. Weiser writes, “In
2012, 100,000 North Carolinians, almost one-third of whom were,
African-American, voted using same day registration, which was not
available this year.”
On November 7, 2014, Ari Berman, from
www.billmoyers.com, recounts the story of veteran Bryan McGowan, who
spent 22 years in the U.S. Marine Corps. He served four tours of duty in
Afghanistan and Iraq. McGowan, who recently moved back to North
Carolina from Georgia, tried to change his voter registration, but, due
to the elimination of same-day registration, he was unable to vote.
Unfortunately, the law will only grow harsher in
2016 when the voter ID provisions will take effect. North Carolina
General Statute §163-166.13 requires photo identification starting
January 1, 2016. Contrary to what repugicans claim, you need your
Social Security card, proof of address and birth certificate in order to
obtain the identification card that will allow you to vote (see
www.ncsbe.gov and www.ncdot.gov). In other words, obtaining the
documents necessary to obtain the ID is tantamount to a “poll tax.” This
does not begin to address the time lost jumping through arbitrary legal
hoops.
The repugicans also like to claim there are mobile
units to register people who cannot leave their homes to obtain an
identification card. This service is limited, and, given North
Carolina’s budget problems, it is tough to imagine how the state will
pay for more of these units.
The impact of North Carolina’s voter ID law has
already been felt. This impact will only grow more marked as it will be
even tougher for minorities to vote come 2016. The future is uncertain,
but what is certain is the harsh voter ID law will have a chilling
effect on voting in North Carolina that will be felt for years to come.
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