Disenfranchising the Weakest Among Us from their basic Constitutional Rights
Posted: July 18, 2012 Filed under: abortion rights, Voter Ignorance, War on Women | Tags: Voter ID laws, Voting Rights Act 22 CommentsThere are elements in the Republican’s Tea Party movement and in many of their supporters that are so obviously misogynistic, xenophobic, and racist that it is difficult to stomach their political discourse. I continue to find the Tea Party movement to contain some of the most unhinged individuals we’ve see influence American governance in some time. Here’s the latest example from Tennessee.
Conservatives and Tea Party activists in Tennessee have recently pushed several Republican Party county organizations to pass resolutions criticizing the state’s Republican governor for, among other things, employing Muslims, gay people, and Democrats.
“The action or actions of the Republican elected Governor of the Great State of Tennessee and his administration have demonstrated a consistent lack of conservative values,” a resolution passed by the Stewart County Republican Party reads in part, according to a copy obtained by The Tennessean. (The Tennessean obtained two of the resolutions.)
We’ve known for some times that the right wing would like to completely remove basic rights from women and minorities. They are striking at not only our immigration laws, our rights to use birth control and abortion, but our basic right to vote and participate in our Democracy.
I’ve read several things just this week that I find terribly disturbing. The first is that many folks expect that the Supreme Court will strike down the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
It’ll be tough to top the drama of the Supreme Court season that just ended. Or so it would seem. When the justices reconvene in October, they’re likely to consider some of the most contentious social issues dividing the country. And judging from snippets in past opinions, that could mean an upheaval in U.S. civil rights law.
The court has already announced that it will hear a challenge to affirmative action in higher education. In that case, a white student rejected by the University of Texas is arguing that the school doesn’t need to choose students based on racial preferences because it already achieves diversity by guaranteeing admission to state residents in the top 10 percent of their high school class.
Affirmative action was upheld nine years ago, but the composition of the court has changed since then. Five members are now openly skeptical of racial preferences. As Chief Justice John Roberts put it in a 2007 case involving integration at the K-12 level: “The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.”
The justices could also deal a blow to minorities if they take up a challenge to the 1965 Voting Rights Act brought by Shelby County, Ala. Officials there say a provision in that law requiring jurisdictions in 16 mostly southern states to get federal clearance before changing their voting rules—so as not to disenfranchise blacks and other minorities—unfairly targets jurisdictions for racial crimes of the past.
“I expect the Voting Rights Act to go down,’’ says Kermit Roosevelt, who clerked for former Supreme Court Justice David Souter and now teaches constitutional law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. “The court has foreshadowed that result, and Roberts seems to want it.” In a 2009 challenge to the landmark law, the justices granted some local governments more leeway in changing their election procedures, and Roberts in particular hinted he’d be sympathetic to striking down the so-called preclearance provision, saying that it raises “serious constitutional questions.”
The approach of the right wing has been to whittle away at basic rights by forcing appointment of extremist judges to the benches on Republican Presidents and blocking appointments to the bench by Democrats. It also has been using each red state to create serpentine regulations that basically make exercising rights nearly impossible. Many are set up to create challenges in the courts to long standing precedent like Roe v Wade or Brown v Board.Witness the Mississippi law to shut down the state’s sole abortion clinic by tailor fitting a regulation to that one specific clinic to drive it out of business. It may be working according to news released today.
The clinic argues that the law will effectively ban abortion in the state and endanger women’s health by limiting access to the procedure. It argued that the law is unconstitutional and would close the clinic “by imposing medically unjustified requirements on physicians who perform abortions.” Lawyers also cite statements from Mississippi officials who said the law was intended to close the clinic.
A denial of admitting privileges could bolster the clinic’s arguments that the law is unconstitutional, a lawyer for the state has suggested. But a final ruling could come only after a trial, and the loser could appeal.
The state argues that the law is intended to enhance the safety of patients. The state’s lawyers have argued that Jordan should disregard statements about trying to close the clinic, a claim he greeted with skepticism in court.
More administrative steps would have to follow before the clinic could be shut. Sharlot said the clinic would have 10 calendar days to respond to any findings. The state’s lawyers have said that a facility not complying with a law would get at least 30 days before an administrative hearing. If a license is revoked at a hearing, the clinic would get 30 days to appeal that decision. Health department officials have said it could take as long as 10 months to close the clinic if it failed to comply.
This is the same shenanigans with Voter ID laws. Use incremental laws that “sound” reasonable to many low information, Fox-propaganda-challenged citizens that have devastating results on the weakest and the poorest among us. Then, keep it up and take any legal challenge as far as you can to whittle away at long standing precedent. The extremists are well aware of the dog whistles scattered throughout these laws and media blitzkriegs. Also, they frequently cloak their real purpose in some high minded rhetoric. They want to stop nonexistent voter fraud in the Voter ID case. It’s making sure ignorant little women are truly informed in the case of exercising abortion rights. Neither of these are real problems.
Here is a study worth reading.
The Challenge of Obtaining Voter Identification Publications
By Keesha Gaskins and Sundeep Iyer
– 07/17/12Ten states now have unprecedented restrictive voter ID laws. Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin all require citizens to produce specific types of government-issued photo identification before they can cast a vote that will count. Legal precedent requires these states to provide free photo ID to eligible voters who do not have one. Unfortunately, these free IDs are not equally accessible to all voters. This report is the first comprehensive assessment of the difficulties that eligible voters face in obtaining free photo ID.
Here’s some basic data found in the study and reported in the executive summary.
The 11 percent of eligible voters who lack the required photo ID must travel to a designated government office to obtain one. Yet many citizens will have trouble making this trip. In the 10 states with restrictive voter ID laws:
- Nearly 500,000 eligible voters do not have access to a vehicle and live more than 10 miles from the nearest state ID-issuing office open more than two days a week. Many of them live in rural areas with dwindling public transportation options.
- More than 10 million eligible voters live more than 10 miles from their nearest state ID-issuing office open more than two days a week.
- 1.2 million eligible black voters and 500,000 eligible Hispanic voters live more than 10 miles from their nearest ID-issuing office open more than two days a week. People of color are more likely to be disenfranchised by these laws since they are less likely to have photo ID than the general population.
- Many ID-issuing offices maintain limited business hours. For example, the office in Sauk City, Wisconsin is open only on the fifth Wednesday of any month. But only four months in 2012 — February, May, August, and October — have five Wednesdays. In other states — Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, and Texas — many part-time ID-issuing offices are in the rural regions with the highest concentrations of people of color and people in poverty.
More than 1 million eligible voters in these states fall below the federal poverty line and live more than 10 miles from their nearest ID-issuing office open more than two days a week. These voters may be particularly affected by the significant costs of the documentation required to obtain a photo ID. Birth certificates can cost between $8 and $25. Marriage licenses, required for married women whose birth certificates include a maiden name, can cost between $8 and $20. By comparison, the notorious poll tax — outlawed during the civil rights era — cost $10.64 in current dollars.
The result is plain: Voter ID laws will make it harder for hundreds of thousands of poor Americans to vote. They place a serious burden on a core constitutional right that should be universally available to every American citizen.
This November, restrictive voter ID states will provide 127 electoral votes — nearly half of the 270 needed to win the presidency. Therefore, the ability of eligible citizens without photo ID to obtain one could have a major influence on the outcome of the 2012 election.
This is disturbing beyond words. We’ve already heard personal stories from friends here with disabilities of their struggles to obtain these kinds of ID cards. Right wingers laugh this off with careless disregard for the very things that make our country precious. It is obvious that winning their agendas by any means necessary is at the heart of all of these kinds of laws. Every one should be highly concerned about all these laws aimed at whittling away at our basic rights. This strategy is being used to usurp more of them everyday. Most of them are aimed at women, racial and religious minorities, and the GLBT community. What makes this worse is the amount of money being poured into creating these awful laws by religious institutions like the LDS Church and the Catholic Bishops and business sponsored organizations like ALEC. Tax exempt churches were instrumental in funding efforts to defeat the ERA and push anti-marriage equality and family planning defunding at all levels of government. Removing votes from voters unaligned with their causes is just one more way to relieve the vulnerable among us of basic rights.
We should be fighting this tooth and nail.






Excellent post! The Republican Party’s efforts to disenfranchise voters is beyond disgusting. Eric Holder is absolutely correct that these laws amount to poll taxes, which are unconstitutional. And in Wis., the fifth Wednesday of the each month is the only time you can get an ID–only four months per year? That’s really shocking.
I think this study shows that the impact is what exactly was planned. They can say all they want about stopping imaginary fraud. This is about not letting the ‘wrong kinds’ of people vote. That means any one likely to vote against a right wing agenda or candidate.
A study shouldn’t be needed to show that, just a look at a couple of the laws ought to be enough. It’s another try for Jim Crow laws with an even broader agenda.
“This is about not letting the ‘wrong kinds’ of people vote. That means any one likely to vote against a right wing agenda or candidate.”
That is exactly what it is. I live in a State that just enacted the state issued voter-photo id law and it is a major burden for seniors and minorities, both urban and rural. The offices where you get these ID’s are crowded, and not easily accessible in rural areas where there is no mass transportation.
I also am fortunate enough <<>>> to live in the State where the xenophobic/homophobic teabots are demanding that Gov. Haslam dump the muslim and teh gay employed in State Government. These same State Legislators pushed a state law to force the City of Nashville to abandon it’s anti-discrimination law that prohibited city offices from doing business with businesses that discriminated against L/G’s. In other words, HATING THE GAY is FINE with the TN State Legislature because “The bible tells them so”.
Hey, if you’re going to get rid of social security or medicare as we know it, you certainly don’t want those pesky seniors or disabled people voting …
FYI….Also TN doesn’t require people over 60 to have a photo-ID drivers license, yet the state now requires a photo-id drivers license to vote. To keep your photo-ID after your 60th birthday is an extra charge at renewal, but I keep paying the charge because I figured these SOB’s were up to something. My photo ID is over 10 years old, in that time I’ve gone from salt & pepper to mostly white hair and I look very different. But I’m not getting a new photo. If I live to be 90, I’m keeping this photo of me and daring them to challenge my right to vote.
I wouldn’t hold my breath but one can hope John Roberts thinks long and hard about the side he’s been on after being viciously attacked for one step out of line. That could turn a guy around.
Rachel Maddow is covering this report on her show tonight.
Good, glad she is doing something on it.
Dak, I just saw this: Second judge rejects state voter ID law – JSOnline
arghhh …
http://content.usatoday.com/communities/ondeadline/post/2012/07/us-judge-orders-tenn-county-to-allow-mosque-to-open/1?csp=34news&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+usatoday-NewsTopStories+%28News+-+Top+Stories%29#.UAdk2vX-3Ld
What don’t people get about practicing religions belongs in religious buildings no matter what religion it is? THEN, your religion does not belong in every one’s LAWS.
good grief, Rachel just said that there is a 48 POINT gap between Obama and Romney in polls of minority voters … 2 – 1 … wow
Amazing huh? Now you know why my hope for TX future is a rising Hispanic population.
I am curious as to why Florida never seems to be included in the list of states that require photo ID to vote. That’s been on the books for many years. And getting a driver’s license is a pain in the a$$. I had my wallet stolen in 2011 & my purse stolen earlier this year. I had to drive about 15 miles to the DL office, produce my birth certificate, 3 recent bills at my address, & my SS card or recent tax return to replace my stolen license. Fortunately I’ve never been married & divorced, otherwise I would have needed my marriage license & divorce decree as well. All of this was difficult enough for me, but for someone without transportation, any mobility problems and/or little money to replace a birth certificate if they didn’t have one seems next to impossible to me. With all of these types of obstacles I think most people will simply say “screw it.” After all, so many people don’t even feel compelled to vote in the first place.
This study was on the ten states with the most restrictive laws.
What state is this? I just lost my wallet, but I went online, filled out a form, and they mailed me a duplicate in about a week, in MA. Cost 25 bucks, but otherwise no hassle.
She said Florida. The difference between FL and MA is we’re not governed by wackos who want to restrict voting rights and therefore keep implementing more and more burdensome regulations for obtaining ID, not to mention attempting to purge the voters rolls.
Dak…..Do my eyes deceive me, or have you been making some modifications to your blog roll? When I saw that List of X was added today, I noticed some MIA’s. Is it so?
Nope … we’ve been modifying away … a few links went to no where, some went to places we no longer want to go …
Needless to say, I’m extremely glad you shit-canned the “places we no longer want to go”.
GOOD WORK!!! 🙂
what Mouse said!
Years ago I registered voters as part of a group of volunteers for the League of Women Voters.
There were so many women who came with their husband and these women had absolutely no ID in their own name — not a driver’s licence, not even a library card. I registered the women — and I suggested that they make an effort to get some form of ID. I’d say something like –There might be a time when you will need to identify yourself and it would make it easier if you had some form of ID. The most pathetic of the women was the one who told me that when she left the house her husband was always with her so she wasn’t worried. What if he’s in an accident at work or going to work — I asked. She had never considered that possibility. So many women had given up their complete identity — I felt like I was in a time warp back to the 19th century.
The Government has forced the “Real ID Act” on the states — and some of the states are using this to their evil advantage. When I read the details of that act I knew it would impact women — married women, rural women (midwife delivered) and the poor, the elderly etc.
The REAL ID Act of 2005, Pub. L. No. 109-13, 119 Stat. 302, enacted May 11, 2005, was an Act of Congress that modified U.S. federal law pertaining to security, authentication, and issuance procedures standards for the state driver’s licenses and identification (ID) cards, as well as various immigration issues pertaining to terrorism. read more
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/REAL_ID_Act