Inspiring Mobilization 'Like Never Before,' NC Voter ID Law Goes on Trial

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North Carolina’s strict new photo-ID voting law, which has been described as both unconstitutional and “a fundamental attack on our democracy,” goes on trial in a federal courthouse Monday.

Civil rights leaders argue that the new rule, which requires voters to use one of six specified IDs when they cast ballots, will disenfranchise minority voters, who are less likely to have one of the required forms of identification.

In fact, Raleigh’s News & Observer reports,

“We see this as a fundamental attack on our democracy which we are fighting with everything we have,” said the Rev. William Barber, president of the North Carolina NAACP and co-founder of the Moral Monday movement. “Extremists in the North Carolina legislature have been working feverishly to keep African Americans, Latino families, students and seniors from the ballot box.”

The ID requirement is part of a 2013 elections law overhaul shepherded through the GOP-led General Assembly and signed into law by Gov. Pat McCrory, a Republican.

The law, which also reduced the number of early voting days, prohibited people from registering and voting on the same day, stopped ballots cast in the wrong precinct from being counted, and ended the practice of preregistering teenagers before they turned 18, was passed just weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court essentially nullified the Voting Rights Act, ruling that North Carolina and other states with a history of discrimination no longer needed federal approval for voting law changes affecting minorities.

Last July, U.S. District Judge Thomas D. Schroeder—who will also hear Monday’s case—held a three-week trial on most of the new voting law. Schroeder, who is deciding the case without a jury, has not yet ruled.

As the Washington Post explains, “on the eve of that trial, the North Carolina legislature added an amendment modifying the photo-ID requirement in the law, so that section was not part of the case. It is the photo-ID requirement that will go on trial Monday.”

According to the Guardian:

The News & Observer notes that “[m]any speculate that the U.S. Supreme Court will be the ultimate arbiter, and North Carolina is among the states being watched as one that could present that case to the country’s highest court.”

Indeed, David Graham wrote for The Atlantic last summer:

Meanwhile, the North Carolina chapter of the NAACP and political advocacy group Democracy NC are countering what they see as voter suppression through a joint campaign to empower, educate, and protect voters.

“We want people to get out and vote, we want them to look at the issues, we want them to understand that voting has consequences and that we’re building an infrastructure not just for 2016 but beyond as well,” Barber said earlier this month at the campaign launch in Asheville. “We have to understand that the fear-mongering, racist rhetoric that we’ve seen is an affront to our democracy and to our deepest moral values. We must take our moral consciousness into the streets and into the ballot box.”

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In addition, a mass Moral March on Raleigh is scheduled for February 13. Primary elections in the state are set for March 15.

“Our legislators are systematically seeking to abridge and suppress our vote and disrespect the rivers of blood which made our vote possible,” reads the call-to-action. In turn, organizers state, “we will mobilize like never before and cast ballots like never before.”

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