"How Voter Backlash Against Voter Suppression Is Changing Our Politics"
How Voter Backlash Against Voter Suppression Is Changing Our Politics
by John Nichols at the Nation
http://www.thenation.com/blog/174095/how-voter-backlash-against-voter-suppression-changing-our-politics?rel=emailNation
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As the 2012 election approached, Republican governors and legislators in battleground states across the country rushed to enact restrictive Voter ID laws, to eliminate election-day registration and to limit early voting. Those were just some of the initiatives that the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People identified as an onslaught of restrictive measures across the country designed to stem electoral strength among communities of color.
Why did so much energy go into the effort?
John Payton, the president and director-counsel of the NAACPs Legal Defense Fund, explained, These block the vote efforts are a carefully targeted response to the remarkable growth of the minority electorate, and threaten to disproportionally diminish the voting strength of African-Americans and Latinos.
Civil rights groups pushed back, working with the League of Women Voters, Common Cause and other organizations to mount legal and legislative challenges. But the most dramatic pushback may well have been the determined voter registration and mobilization drives organized on the ground in Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and other battleground states.
A key supporter of the Ohio voter registration and turnout drive, State Senator Nina Turner says, Republicans thought that they could suppress the vote, but these efforts actually motivated people to get registered and cast a ballot. Its no surprise that the communities targeted by these policies came out to the polls in a big waythey saw this not just as an affront to their rights, but as a call to action.
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