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Closing arguments set for Racist South Carolina voter ID case: Law would not be implemented by election day but may have chilling effect on Turnout

From [HERE] Closing arguments Monday over South Carolina’s voter-identification law will cap an extraordinary case that has seen charges of racism directed at the law’s author and federal judges’ open frustration over state officials’ changing stances on implementing it.

Opponents of the embattled law, which U.S. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. blocked last year under the 1965 Voting Rights Act, will challenge the credibility of its chief author, state Rep. Alan D. Clemmons (R) of Myrtle Beach.

Attorneys for the voter-ID law’s foes, including civil rights groups, will say Clemmons took false credit for its “reasonable impediment” clause, which allows voters to cast ballots if they have “reasonable” reasons for not having photo identification. Attorneys also will say Clemmons misrepresented his relationship with a man who sent him an e-mail about the law that the lawmaker acknowledged under oath last month was racist.

And the lawyers trying to kill the law will argue that Alan Wilson, South Carolina attorney general, and Marci Andino, executive director of the State Election Commission, lack the legal authority to implement the voter-ID law in ways that contradict the law’s text or other relevant state laws.

Attorneys for South Carolina will respond that the voter-ID law is aimed at preventing election fraud, and they’ll point to key Supreme Court rulings that states don’t need to show the existence of fraud in order to take steps against it. Attorneys also will argue that state officials’ plans for implementing the law aren’t contradictory or at variance with its provisions.

At issue under the Voting Rights Act, which protects minorities’ access to the ballot box, is whether the South Carolina law’s requirement that voters possess one of five forms of photo identification would have a disproportionately harmful impact on African Americans. Of several cases in which state voter-ID laws are under legal scrutiny, South Carolina’s is among the most closely watched because of the state’s troubled history of racial relations and because it could have national implications from an expected future U.S. Supreme Court ruling on it.

Garrard Beeney, lead attorney for the intervenors, which include civil rights groups and individual South Carolinians who claim the law would hurt them, said trial testimony last month showed that minority voters would feel its brunt. They are poorer as a whole and would have more difficulty obtaining the photo IDs, he said.

“There really is no dispute from anyone at this trial that blacks are less likely than whites to have the new kinds of ID voters would have to have,” Beeney said in an interview Friday.

Chris Bartolomucci, a D.C. lawyer representing the state, disputed that claim.

“The bottom line on [the law’s] effect is that it’s not going to prevent any lawful voter from voting, whether white or black,” Bartolomucci said in an interview.

Since Barack Obama’s 2008 candidacy prompted record turnout by black voters, 34 state legislatures, most with Republican majorities, have taken up bills imposing stricter ID requirements, with 16 states passing laws. The laws vary widely, and only some of the states are among the 16 that fall wholly or partly under the Voting Rights Act, which requires the Justice Department to approve all election changes in those covered places.

Voter-ID laws in South Carolina and Texas are among the most high-profile because they are under court challenge and because of those states’ segregationist histories.

A federal court last month rejected the Texas voter-ID law, and the U.S. Supreme Court will probably decide its fate, possibly in tandem with the South Carolina law.

South Carolina sued Holder over his rejection of its law, which Gov. Nikki Haley (R) signed in May 2011, and the trial last month in Washington featured five days of often dramatic testimony.

Under questioning from the three-judge panel hearing the case, Andino said the state would “give the benefit of the doubt” to voters who lack a driver’s license, a military ID or three other new forms of photo ID required by the law. Andino also said notaries would not charge those voters for signing affidavits citing a “reasonable impediment” to obtaining the IDs. And she said the affidavits would not have to be notarized if a notary wasn’t available at the polling station where the voter was casting a ballot.

Opposing lawyers ripped the notary fees as a new type of poll tax, among the most odious of the former Jim Crow practices used mainly in Southern states to block African Americans from voting.

Beeney said the state’s more lenient explanations of how it would implement the law contradict its earlier positions and, in part, the law’s codified requirements.

“The state’s constantly shifting interpretation of the [voter-ID] act is characterized by multiple inconsistencies, contradictions and non-sequiturs,” Beeney said. “They literally are all over the map.”

The state’s most recent pledges that it will abide by Andino’s testimony toward the end of the trial last month puts her squarely in the crosshairs.

“Ms. Andino’s efforts to rewrite the voter law so that it doesn’t disenfranchise minorities are certainly admirable, but South Carolina law provides no legal basis for Ms. Andino to interpret the voter-ID law, much less provide an authoritative interpretation,” Beeney said.

Wilson, the South Carolina attorney general, expressed confidence that the state will prevail.

“This law was passed almost a year-and-a-half ago,” Wilson said. “South Carolina looks forward to oral arguments on Monday and to the court’s final decision.”

If the three-judge panel upholds the voter-ID law in a ruling expected next month, it technically would be in effect in South Carolina for the Nov. 6 elections, but Wilson told the court that such a decision would come too late to apply it.

If the judicial panel rejects the voter-ID law, a high-court ruling would all but certainly come after the elections, so it wouldn’t be in place Election Day.