Over the last few years, we’ve seen quite a few states take up new voting restrictions, immediately on the heels of Republican gains in the 2010 election cycle, so much so that the notion of a “Republican war on voting” was widely recognized and understood. After the 2012 elections, despite the failures of voter suppression, state GOP officials renewed their efforts.
But it’s probably fair to say we haven’t seen anything quite as astounding as the proposed restrictions in North Carolina. Barbara Arnwine, president of the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, said, “This is the single worst bill we have seen introduced since voter suppression bills began sweeping the country.”
And as of this morning, it seems all but certain to pass.
The Senate gave key approval Wednesday to legislation that radically alters how voting will be conducted in North Carolina in future elections.
House Bill 589 passed by a 32-14 vote. A final vote is expected Thursday, and the House would then have to agree with the myriad changes the Senate made to what started out as a measure to require voters to show photo identification at the polls.
The Republicans efforts to suppress voting has drawn public protests — six people were arrested after participating in a sit-in at state House Speaker Thom Tillis’ office yesterday — but for now, the GOP majority in both chambers of the state legislature don’t seem to care.
Remember, as recently as a few months ago, North Carolina Republicans shelved plans for voting restrictions, assuming they’d never get Justice Department clearance under the Voting Rights Act. But after five Republican-nominated Supreme Court justices gutted the VRA, conservatives in North Carolina not only took their proposal off the shelf, they made it much worse.
As Rachel explained on the show last night, “They’re going after early voting. They’re going after voter registration drives. For college students, not only will you not be able to use your college ID to allow you to vote, but if you vote where you go to college, the state wants to tax your parents as a penalty for you voting in your college town. If your ID is from public assistance, you can’t use that to vote. If your ID is because you’re a public worker, because you work for a city or a county in North Carolina, you cannot even use that ID to vote.”
Aside from the obvious reason, why do this on purpose to your own state’s electorate?
Republican proponents say it’s to prevent voter fraud, but we already know that’s patently ridiculous. By any fair assessment, this is about rigging elections.









