Citing the threat to minority voting rights, the Obama administration and civil rights groups have asked a judge to put North Carolina’s restrictive voting law on hold for this fall’s election—when the state will host a pivotal U.S. Senate race.
If the law is allowed to remain in effect this November, “African-Americans in North Carolina are likely to suffer substantial and disproportionate impairment of their right to vote,” the law’s challengers wrote in court documents filed late Monday. They asked that the court issue a preliminary injunction blocking the controversial measure.
Also Monday night, lawyers for North Carolina asked that the challenge to the law be thrown out, arguing that the plaintiffs have offered no evidence that it would disproportionately harm blacks.
North Carolina’s voting law, passed by Republicans last summer in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling that weakened the Voting Rights Act, has been called the nation’s harshest. It cut early voting, eliminated same-day registration, ended out-of-precinct voting, and scrapped a popular program that helped high-school students to pre-register, among other restrictive provisions. It also contains a strict photo ID requirement, scheduled to go into effect in 2016.
The measure was quickly challenged by the Justice Department and civil rights groups, who allege—backed by reams of evidence—that it disproportionately affects black and Hispanic voters. But the trial won’t take place until summer 2015, meaning that, without an injunction, the law would be in effect this fall.
“Voters are at real risk of being blocked from participating in the pivotal midterm election,” said Dale Ho, director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project, in a statement. “If this law is subsequently found unconstitutional, as we fully expect it will be, North Carolinians who were denied the vote will never get a do-over.”









