Last Friday, Rand Paul told the New York Times that Republicans shouldn’t “go too crazy” about voter ID, because “it’s offending people.”
It was noteworthy that a potential leading candidate for the GOP’s presidential nomination would publicly rebuke his own side on an issue where partisan passions run so high. But the Kentucky senator is definitely an outlier: The list of possible Republican presidential candidates includes several people who have played leading roles in the assault on voting rights in recent years, from Wisconsin to Florida to Texas.
The next president could have a major impact on voting rights issues. It’ll be his or her Attorney General who’ll decide whether to challenge restrictive voting laws passed by the states, as Eric Holder has done. He or she could help push Congress to fix the Voting Rights Act, which doesn’t look like it’ll get done under President Obama. And the president’s bully pulpit can be a valuable tool in the debate, as Obama showed in his forceful voting rights speech last month.
So as the positioning for 2016 intensifies, we’ve used their past records and public comments to rank the top potential GOP presidential candidates on the issue—starting with those who have been most committed to restricting the vote. From the standpoint of protecting access to the ballot, the picture isn’t too encouraging.
Scott WalkerThe Wisconsin governor is committed to making it harder to vote. He was loud and proud in support of his state’s voter ID law, and at one point even threatened to call a special legislative session to modify if the law if a court struck it down. Walker also signed a recent measure that reduced early voting, including ending weekend voting. He even raised the idea of scrapping same-day voter registration—a convenience that has brought hundreds of thousands of Wisconsinites into the process—before backing off amid budget concerns. Walker’s former campaign co-chair, Michael Grebe, runs the Bradley Foundation, a conservative think tank that, during Walker’s 2010 run for governor, put billboards in black neighborhoods warning “Voter Fraud is a Felony.”
Rick PerryFrom the start, Perry was a prime mover behind his state’s voter ID law—perhaps the nation’s strictest—which was passed in 2011. “Chalk up another victory for fraud,” he said when a federal court struck down the law as racially discriminatory. (It has since been reinstated thanks to the Supreme Court’s Shelby County ruling last year). Perry also signed off on a GOP redistricting scheme that was found by a different federal court to discriminate against the state’s racial minorities.
Ted CruzSo committed is the Texas senator to making access to the ballot harder than last year he inserted into the immigration bill an amendment requiring that people registering to vote must show ID—something experts warn will shut out numerous recent citizens from the process. As his state’s solicitor general, Cruz submitted a brief on behalf of eight states in support of voter ID law in a crucial case before the U.S. Supreme Court. “Voter fraud is a serious problem threatening the integrity of our democratic process,” he declared on his website while running for the U.S. Senate. And Cruz also hailed the Supreme Court’s Shelby County ruling weakening the Voting Rights Act, saying in a statement that it freed his state from “second-guessing by unelected federal bureaucrats.”
John KasichThe Ohio governor has quietly played a crucial role in the Republican effort to pare back voting rights in the Buckeye State. Just since last year, he’s signed laws that: reduce early voting and eliminate same-day voter registration; reduce the minimum number of voting machines that counties must have on hand; make it easier to purge voters from the rolls; make it more likely that provisional ballots will be rejected; and make it harder to obtain an absentee ballot. The early voting cuts are the subject of a lawsuit in federal court, alleging that they discriminate against African-Americans.
Jeb BushAs governor of Florida, Bush helped engineer perhaps the most consequential attack on voting rights in U.S. history. It was his administration that conducted flawed purges of voter rolls just before the 2000 election, then—led by Bush’s hand-picked secretary of state, Katherine Harris—ordered a halt to the recount and certified the results in favor of Bush’s brother, George. In the aftermath of that fiasco, Jeb Bush did support reform—including electronic voting machines—proposed by a commission that aimed to fix the state’s dysfunctional election system.
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Marco RubioThe Florida senator is a voter ID supporter. People have to show ID to get on a plane, among other activities, he argued during a 2012 campaign stop. “What’s the big deal? What is the big deal?” Rubio also supported an effort to eliminate Sunday voting in his state.









