From Virginia to Arkansas and North Carolina to Missouri, leaders, lawyers and citizens took significant strides this week to protect voting rights. It was the strongest sign yet that the pushback against Republican efforts to curtail access to the ballot box had gathered momentum.
In Virginia, the Democratic governor made it easier for ex-felons to get their voting rights back. Advocates filed a challenge to Arkansas’s voter ID law, and offered crucial new evidence about the impact of North Carolina’s cuts to early voting. And Missouri Republicans moved to establish limited early voting—a sign of the growing energy to expand ballot access in the state.
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The efforts in Arkansas and North Carolina aim to further a strategy that’s been notably effective for voting-rights advocates in recent years: the use of the courts.
“Some politicians think they can get away with suppressing the vote. We’re putting them on notice with our legal challenges that they can’t toy with citizens’ fundamental right to cast a ballot. The people, and our democracy, deserve and demand better,” said Dale Ho, director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project.
The week’s developments come on the heels of President Obama’s landmark speech earlier this month at the National Action Network, where he called out Republican efforts to make voting harder, and to connect today’s fight for voting rights today to the struggle to enfranchise southern blacks half a century ago.
“Americans did not stand up and did not march and did not sacrifice to gain the right to vote, for themselves and for others, only to see it denied to their kids and their grandkids,” Obama said.
Last year alone, at least 93 restrictive voting bills were introduced in 33 states, according to a Brennan Center tally, building on an earlier wave of voter suppression laws advanced in 2011 and 2012. The vast majority were pushed by Republicans bent on making voting harder, and many disproportionately affect minority, low-income, and student voters. The most restrictive, like Texas’s voter ID law and North Carolina’s sweeping voting law, are being challenged in court. But that process may not move fast enough for Democrats, who are preparing for several critical midterm races that could determine control of the Senate for the rest of Obama’s presidency.
The president’s dramatic intervention, aimed in large part at motivating core Democratic voters to turn out in November, ensures that the issue will remain on the front-burner through the fall.
On Friday, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, picked up the baton, announcing that he’ll cut the wait period from five to three years for people convicted of violent felonies to apply to have their right to vote restored. McAuliffe also said he’d remove all drug crimes from the list of “violent” felonies. Non-violent felons have their rights automatically restored after serving their time and paying fines, thanks to a move last year by Bob McDonnell, McAuliffe’s Republican predecessor.
In Arkansas, home to a crucial U.S. Senate race this year, the A.C.L.U. filed a lawsuit Wednesday against the state’s voter ID measure.









