EFTA00591886.pdf
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POLITICS
North Carolina Voter ID Bill Signed Into
Law By Gov. Pat McCrory, Sparking
Lawsuits
By Luke Johnson: 8/12/13
North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory (R) signed a bill Monday
requiring photo identification at the polls and eliminating a
slew of voting measures designed to protect against voter
disenfranchisement.
The governor, eschewing a more traditional signing
ceremony, announced by way of a YouTube video that he
had signed House Bill 589.
The bill will require voters to show photo identification -- a
driver's license, passport, veteran's ID, tribal card --
beginning in the 2016 elections. Student IDs are not an
acceptable form of identification. The bill also reduces early
voting by a week, eliminates same-day registration, ends pre-registration for 16-and-17
year-olds and a student civics program, kills an annual state-sponsored voter
registration drive and lessens the amount of public reporting required for so-called dark
money groups, also known as 501(c)(4)s.
The bill does provide for a "free ID" to be offered at DMVs, though the state estimates
that between 203,351 and 318,643 voters registered in North Carolina lack ID, and that
providing them with one would cost $834,200 in 2013 and 2014, and $24,100 every two
years after that.
McCrory said the bill was necessary even if there are very few reported cases of voter
fraud. "Even if the instances of misidentified people casting votes are low, that shouldn't
prevent us from putting this non-burdensome safeguard in place," he said in a Raleigh
News and Observer op-ed. "Just because you haven't been robbed doesn't mean you
shouldn't lock your doors at night or when you're away from home."
Just hours after McCrory's signature, the ACLU of North Carolina and a coalition of
other groups filed a lawsuit against the bill, charging that it violates the Constitution's
Equal Protection Clause and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The North Carolina NAACP
and Advancement Project followed shortly after, filing another lawsuit.
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The latest bill comes after the Supreme Court struck down the core of the Voting Rights
Act, which required Southern states with a history of racial discrimination -- including
North Carolina -- to have their laws cleared by the Department of Justice. The Justice
Department could still try to invalidate the recent North Carolina law on the grounds
that it deliberately discriminates against voters, a much higher standard than merely
proving it disproportionately affects minority voters.
The bill has the potential to reduce turnout for key Democratic constituencies --
minorities, the elderly and students -- with the slew of new requirements, even beyond
the new measures for identification. President Barack Obama narrowly won North
Carolina in 2008 but lost it in 2012, and in 2016, the state is likely to be a battleground.
The legislation, passed by the Republican-controlled legislature over the objections of
Democrats before heading to McCrory's desk, is the latest of a string of conservative
legislation signed into law in the state. McCrory has also signed measures introducing
new restrictions for abortion clinics (attached to a motorcycle safety bill), expanding
concealed-carry permits to bars and restaurants, and cutting unemployment benefits.
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| Filename | EFTA00591886.pdf |
| File Size | 155.1 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,374 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T22:51:53.885885 |