US Attorney files Amicus Brief in ACLU Voting Rights Case
http://aclu-wi.org/media/us-attorney-files-amicus-brief-aclu-voting-rights-case
MILWAUKEE, Wis. The Department of Justice today intervened in the ACLU of Wisconsin voting rights case, filing an amicus brief in opposition to the voter ID law. The case is currently at the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals.
The 37-page brief said, in part:
Regarding the constitutional claim, the district court credited plaintiffs evidence demonstrating that, under Act 23, many eligible voters would no longer be able to vote or would encounter significant obstacles in order to vote... Because it found [the governments] interests minimal at best, the court properly concluded that Act 23 imposes an unjustified burden on the right to vote, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, as applied to those voters.
In evaluating plaintiffs [Voting Rights Act] claim, the court properly considered the totality of circumstances including whether social, political, and historical conditions in Wisconsin hinder minorities political participation and whether the States asserted justifications for Act 23 are tenuous and correctly concluded that Act 23 will have a racially discriminatory result, in violation of Section 2 (of the Voting Rights Act).
Larry Dupuis, Legal Director of the ACLU of Wisconsin, added: "The federal court was right to strike down this discriminatory law, and the federal government clearly agrees with them. It's too bad that some elected officials still seem fixated on depriving Wisconsinites of the right to vote."