Georgia state lawmakers vow
to repeal voter ID law
Errin Haines
ATLANTA — At the end of a losing battle during the past legislative
session, Georgia state Rep. Alisha Thomas Morgan burst into the
civil rights anthem “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me
Around” to protest the passage of a law requiring voters to
show a photo ID at the polls.
In the next session starting Jan. 9, the 27-year-old black Democrat
says she will not be moved in her fight to get the law repealed.
“It’s whatever it takes,” Morgan said. “I’m
putting on the armor. Nothing they can do will fix the bill. It’s
a bad law and it needs to be repealed. We’re not going backwards.”
Thomas and other black lawmakers know they are in for a battle as
Republicans stand determined to defend the law, which requires voters
who do not have a driver’s license to buy a state-issued ID
card for as much as $35 - a fee critics say hurts the poor, the
elderly and minorities.
The law eliminates the use of some other forms of identification
to vote, including Social Security cards, birth certificates and
utility bills. Supporters, including Republican Gov. Sonny Perdue,
argued that the measure would help prevent fraud.
In October, a federal judge blocked Georgia from enforcing the law,
saying the measure amounts to an unconstitutional poll tax because
the state is not doing enough to make ID cards available to those
who cannot afford them.
Republican Sen. Cecil Staton, the legislation’s chief Senate
sponsor, is proposing to amend the law during the upcoming session.
He said he is willing, among other things, to make the state-issued
IDs free for the asking.
“I don’t want there to be a hardship any more than necessary
for voters, but I don’t think it’s too much to ask that
when you come in to vote, you help us see that you are who you say
you are,” Staton said. He added: “Most Georgians think
this is common sense, including African-Americans.”
However, black legislators are promising to fight any plan that
does not repeal the law, and they are getting support from the AARP,
the League of Women Voters, the American Civil Liberties Union and
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
“This is a fight that has to be fought. A whole lot of folks
have expended a lot of blood, sweat and tears to protect voting
rights. It’s a fundamental issue,” said Sen. Vincent
Fort, an Atlanta Democrat.
The measure heightened racial tensions in the Legislature last spring.
Many black lawmakers were distressed when their stories of blacks
being deprived of the right to vote in the South during the Jim
Crow era fell on deaf ears, and most of them walked out of the Capitol
when the bill passed in March. The widow of the Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr., Coretta Scott King, called on the governor to veto the
measure.
Democrats argued that there has been little voter fraud in Georgia
and that the legislation was a ploy by the GOP to suppress voting
among minorities and the poor.
The law did not go into effect until August, when it was approved
by the U.S. Justice Department. Under the Voting Rights Act, Georgia
and other states with a history of denying blacks the vote must
get the department’s permission to change their voting laws.
In November, a Justice Department memo was leaked that revealed
that a team of federal lawyers and analysts initially opposed the
Georgia law before it won the department’s approval.
According to the National Council of State Legislatures, voters
in 20 other states are asked to show identification before voting.
In five states — Florida, Hawaii, Louisiana, South Carolina
and South Dakota, voters must show photo ID; the 15 other states
accept other forms of identification. Indiana will require photo
identification beginning Jan. 1.
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