Judge Won’t Rule on Student ID Voting Requirements
Plaintiffs argue that specific ID requirements are a barrier to voting for students.
In a federal lawsuit challenging Wisconsin’s laws on the acceptance of student IDs for voting, a federal judge ruled Wednesday that he wouldn’t weigh in before the general election to avoid “chaos and confusion.”
The plaintiffs counter that this causes unnecessary obstacles for student voters.
The lawsuit, Common Cause Wisconsin and Benjamin Quintero v. Wisconsin Elections Commission, aims to remove the requirements that a student ID have an issue date, an expiration date two years from that issuance date and a signature.
“If the court were to issue an order changing the status quo now, it would leave the Commission and municipal clerks with little time to issue new guidance and retrain staff,” Peterson wrote. “The nearly inevitable appeal would mean weeks of uncertainty as the case was reviewed by the court of appeals and possibly the Supreme Court.”
“Any order from this court in favor of the plaintiffs could lull student voters into complacency, believing that they now held an ID valid for voting, only to find out on the eve of the election that an appellate court had reached a different conclusion,” he continued. “This would leave both students and universities scrambling at the last minute to obtain compliant IDs.”
Most Wisconsin colleges and universities issue voter compliant student IDs to all students or issue voter compliant IDs when requested. If a student’s ID is expired, the ID can still be used to vote if the student provides documentation of their enrollment at the school.
Most Wisconsin students can ask their schools for voting compliant IDs. For students at schools that do not offer compliant IDs, they will need to obtain another photo ID, such as a driver’s license, state ID or U.S. Passport. Information about photo ID requirements is available at bringit.wi.gov.
Jay Heck, executive director for Common Cause Wisconsin, one of the plaintiffs in the case, said the obstacles he believes the current law places in front of students trying to vote should have been lifted before November.
“We are very disappointed that the Court has decided not to provide much needed relief before the election,” Heck said. “The onerous burden and the obstacles placed on college and university students in Wisconsin to be able to vote with a photo ID from their institution is greater than in any other state in the country. The effect of this delay is that many thousands could be disenfranchised for November 3rd. But we feel very good about our chances of prevailing in this matter when the court decides it after the election.”
Reprinted with permission of Wisconsin Examiner.
We have three Constitutional amendments and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 that guarantees the right of every citizen to vote. Voter suppression has become part of the Republican game plan to maintain their power grab which alleged conservative judges go along with. In time, Republicans would probably like to revert to the voting eligibility of white men who own land which used to be the standard when the county was born.