Texas' Voter ID Laws Are Plain and Simple Discrimination
By Natasha M. Korgaonkar
Assistant Counsel of the Political Participation Group at the NAACP's Legal Defense Fund
... In a state and country where voters of color are significantly more likely to live in poverty than white voters, the impermissible choice that Texas has imposed on voters discriminates on the basis of class and race both. In the wake of Supreme Court's decision earlier this summer in Shelby County, Alabama v. Holder, which immobilized a key provision of the Voting Rights Act, the Department of Justice's lawsuit represents the next phase in pushing back against measures that are intended to make it harder for people of color to vote, and less likely that our votes will count when we do.
Texas, like many states, passed SB 14 for the ostensible reason of combating in-person voter fraud, which Hillary Rodham Clinton recently called a "phantom epidemic." But Texas has not been able to identify a single instance of in-person voter fraud. Texas has said that the law is not intended to discriminate against Black and Latino voters, whose communities represent 90 percent of the state's population grown in the past decade, and yet the state's legislature refused to accept any of the amendments offered that would have mitigated any of SB 14's burdens that disproportionately affect voters of color amendments that, for example, would have created a way for poor voters to get free identification, or would have accepted student IDs.
A single comparison of the accepted and not accepted forms of photo ID makes the priorities of the law clear: SB 14 will allow voters to present a concealed handgun license at the polls, but not a student ID from any of Texas's public universities ...
http://www.usnews.com/debate-club/is-the-justice-department-right-to-sue-over-texas-voter-id-law/texas-voter-id-laws-are-discriminatory