Opponents of a voter ID bill in the Nebraska legislature say they’ve succeeded in killing the measure.
Eleven Republicans joined all 14 Democrats Wednesday in voting to shelve for the year an ID bill that just last month was seen as having a good shot at passing.
“It is victory. It’s done,” state Sen. Adam Morfeld, who led the opposition, told msnbc moments after coming off the floor. “The bill is dead.”
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The utter lack of documented voter fraud in the state made the bill a tough sell even with many Republicans. The measure’s backers were unable to cite even one example of fraud that would have been stopped by the law.
“The argument that really won the day was that voter impersonation is a non-existent problem in the state of Nebraska,” Morfeld said. “And why would we have an unnecessary government mandate on a fundamental constitutional right?”
The bill would have required voters show one of a narrow range of forms of identification issued by the state or federal government. Voting rights advocates had said at least 112,000 Nebraskans, likely significantly more, lack the ID that would have been required.









