Attorney General Eric Holder Says He's Ready to Protect Voters
On Tuesday Attorney General Eric Holder said he is ready fully enforce civil rights protections in next year's elections. "We need election systems that are free from fraud, discrimination and partisan influence -- and that are more, not less, accessible to the citizens of this country," Holder said, speaking at the Lyndon B. Johnson Library in Austin, Texas. Texas is just one of the states the Department of Justice is investigating for introducing photo ID laws that could potentially block millions from casting their ballots by requiring them to produce a photo identification before entering a voting booth. Experts say the new restrictions fall most heavily on young and low-income voters, those with disabilities and voters of color. "In 1965, when President Johnson signed the landmark Voting Rights Act into law, he proclaimed that 'the right to vote is the basic right, without which all others are meaningless,' " Holder said on Tuesday night. "Today, as attorney general, I have the privilege -- and the solemn duty -- of enforcing this law, and the other civil rights reforms that President Johnson championed. This work is among the Justice Department's most important priorities." South Carolina, Alabama, Kansas, Mississippi, Rhode Island, Tennessee and Wisconsin have also enacted more stringent voter ID laws this year. A study released in October from predicts five million voters could be affected by the deluge of restrictive voting laws that have swept the country. The Attorney General also spoke about other initiatives to prevent citizens from voting.
The states that have already cut back on voting rights will provide 171 electoral votes in 2012 - 63 percent of the 270 needed to win the presidency. |
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