Fifth Circuit Reinstates Texas Government Photo-ID Law for Voters at Polls

On October 14, the Fifth Circuit reversed a U.S. District Court in Texas and reinstated the Texas requirement that voters at the polls show certain types of government photo-ID in order to vote. Here is the order.

The decision is written by Judge Edith Brown Clement, a George W. Bush appointee, and signed by Judges Catharine Haynes, another George W. Bush nominee, and Gregg Costa, an Obama appointee. The rationale is that it is too close to the election to change anything. The order quotes from Williams v Rhodes, the 1968 U.S. Supreme Court opinion that put the American Independent Party on the Ohio ballot, as saying how difficult it is to re-print ballots as late as October 15. But it does not mention the U.S. Supreme Court order in Norman v Reed, putting the Harold Washington Party on the Cook County, Illinois ballot, only twelve days before the November 1990 election. In that case, the Court required Cook County to re-print 3,000,000 ballots.

It is somewhat likely that the voting rights groups who brought the Texas case will ask the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse the Fifth Circuit. Thanks to Justin Levitt for the link.


Comments

Fifth Circuit Reinstates Texas Government Photo-ID Law for Voters at Polls — 1 Comment

  1. Is it possible for the appointed SCOTUS robot hacks to write that —

    IF ANY-thing is ILLEGAL regarding an election, then the election shall be redone to be LEGAL — at the cost of the *person(s)* who caused the ILLEGAL stuff ???

    OR — is the USA just one more banana republic with arbitrary rigged LAWLESS bogus / fraud elections —
    due to the EVIL gerrymander hacks in the Congress and State legislatures ???

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