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Lawyers'
Committee for Civil
Rights Under Law
1401 New York Avenue, NW
Suite 400
Washington, DC 20005
For
Immediate Release
Contact: Jon Greenbaum
212-662-8315
July 8, 2005
Civil Rights Groups Urge Justice Department to Block
Georgia Photo ID Law
ATLANTA -- More than two dozen civil rights, religious,
labor and advocacy groups urged the Department of
Justice to block implementation of a new Georgia law
which they say will have a substantially negative
racial impact on minority voters. The
groups argue that the new photo identification requirements
contained in Georgia House Bill 244 are unnecessary
and were purposefully adopted to make minority voters
worse off.
The American Civil Liberties Union Voting Rights Project,
which is part of the coalition, said that the Voting
Rights Act of 1965 calls for the federal government
to monitor changes to election laws in Georgia.
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act clearly places
the burden of proof on Georgia officials to show that
this new law does not have a discriminatory purpose
or effect, said Neil Bradley, Associate Director
of the ACLU Voting Rights Project in Atlanta. Based
on Georgias own submission to the Justice Department,
it is clear that the state has failed that test and
the law should not be permitted to go into effect.
House Bill 244, which was passed on March 31 and signed
by Governor Sonny Perdue in April, reduces the various
forms of identification that voters can use from 17
to six, and makes photo identification absolutely
required in order to vote.
In a 13-page
letter sent late yesterday, 25 groups and seven
attorneys cite recent census data showing that African
Americans in Georgia are nearly five times less likely
than whites to have access to a motor vehicle, and
hence are less likely to possess a drivers license,
which is one of the approved forms of voter identification.
African Americans also are nearly six times more likely
than whites in Georgia to live below the poverty line.
And because Georgia has only 56 Department of Motor
Vehicle Services (DMVS) offices statewide, compared
to its 159 counties, African Americans will face increased
obstacles and costs to securing photo identification,
said the groups.
Sixty years ago, Georgia's all-white legislature
abolished the poll tax, thereby preventing any Georgia
citizen from being charged money to vote. This new
law turns back the clock and violates that principle,
said Bradley.
In the letter, the groups argue that the primary justification
for Georgias new photo identification requirements
to deter voter fraud was both flawed
and unfounded. The groups pointed to the states
already severe criminal sanctions for voter impersonation,
and noted the absence of evidence that voter fraud
is a problem in Georgia.
The photo identification provisions of HB 244
are an affront to many of our most basic legal principles
and jurisprudence related to a persons fundamental
right to vote, said Seth Cohen, an attorney
with the Atlanta law firm Kilpatrick Stockton LLP
and a member of the counsel committee that helped
prepare the letter. As the letter to the DOJ
demonstrates, this is a belief that is shared by a
diverse group of individuals and organizations and
which is supported by an overabundance of facts.
The groups also called on the Justice Department to
more thoroughly investigate a number of factors before
deciding whether to authorize implementation of H.B.
244, including the racial breakdown of counties with
and without DMVS locations, the travel distance to
DMVS locations from areas with high concentrations
of minority voters and other socio-economic data associated
with the cost and use of photo identification by minorities.
We hope and expect the Justice Department to
do its job by requiring the state to meet its burden
of proof to show why this new legislation will not
harm minority voters, said Jon Greenbaum, Director
of the Voting Rights Project for the Lawyers
Committee for Civil Rights Under Law and a former
DOJ attorney. From our point of view, the evidence
is quite clear that the state has failed that test
and H.B. 244 will make minority voters considerably
worse off.
The
Lawyers Committee is an over forty-year old
nonpartisan, nonprofit civil rights legal organization,
formed in 1963 at the request of President John F.
Kennedy to provide legal services to address racial
discrimination.
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