Greater Birmingham Ministries v. Merrill
Greater Birmingham Ministries v. Merrill
Opinion of the Court
I. INTRODUCTION
This case addresses the voting rights claims of Plaintiffs Greater Birmingham Ministries, the Alabama State Conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People ("the Alabama NAACP"), Giovana Ambrosio, Shameka Harris, and Elizabeth Ware, against John Merrill in his official capacity as Alabama's Secretary of State ("Secretary Merrill"). In this action, Plaintiffs challenge Alabama's Photo Voter Identification Law, House Bill 19 of 2011, codified at
Presently before the Court are cross motions for summary judgment filed by all parties. Specifically, Secretary Merrill has filed a Motion for Summary Judgment seeking the dismissal of all of Plaintiffs' claims. (Doc. 236.) Plaintiffs have filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment seeking a judgment in their favor on one of their claims and on one discrete issue. (Doc. 234.) For the reasons that follow, Secretary Merrill's motion is due to be granted and this action dismissed in its entirety.
*1257II. FACTS
A. Historical and Contemporaneous Background
Penalties for voter fraud have existed in Alabama since the 1850s. While cases of proven in-person voter fraud in Alabama are extremely rare, there are some documented cases of absentee voter fraud in Alabama in recent history. For example, a July 1996 article in The Birmingham News discussed the types of voter fraud allegedly occurring in Alabama: "Since 1994, affidavits and courtroom testimony have established the following abuses: (1) absentee ballots cast in the names of dead people and people who have long since moved out of the county; (2) absentee ballots mailed to unregistered voters; (3) voter brokers following mail trucks and removing absentee ballots from mailboxes; (4) intimidation of poor and elderly voters who are made to fear a cutoff of their governmental assistance from local politicians if they do not cooperate by handing over their absentee ballots; (5) pressuring and solicitation of nursing home patients; (6) vote buying at $5 and $10 a piece; (7) bulk mailing of hundreds of absentee ballots by just a few individuals in some counties...." The State and federal governments worked together to investigate and prosecute voter fraud in absentee voting in places like Greene and Wilcox counties. Various citizen groups formed to spread the word about the need for a photo ID law to combat voter fraud, such as the bi-racial Honest Elections Coalition.
In 1995, the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 went into effect, allowing persons to register to vote at motor vehicle and public welfare agencies or by mailing in easily-available voter registration forms. See
Although some in the Legislature tried, voter ID bills failed in the Legislature in the nineties. In 1998, Governor Fob James, Attorney General Bill Pryor, and Secretary of State Jim Bennett were unified in fighting for a voter ID law. An article reported that then-Attorney General Bill Pryor "believes honest elections would restore voter confidence and increase turnout. He said critics who claim there's no vote fraud need to check the record. State and federal prosecutors have won convictions in several counties against officials and citizens who illegally cast ballots."
By 2000, fourteen other states requested some kind of ID in order to vote. In 2003, Alabama passed a voter ID law that allowed the use of both photo and non-photo
In 2005, the Commission on Federal Election Reform, chaired by former President Jimmy Carter and former U.S. Secretary of State James Baker, issued a report encouraging States to move towards requiring voters to present photo IDs before being allowed to cast a ballot. See Report of the Commission on Federal Election Reform, Building Confidence in U.S. Elections § 2.5 (Sept. 2005) ("the Carter-Baker Report"). The Carter-Baker Report found that even in the absence of extensive voter fraud, the use of photo IDs would inspire public confidence in the voting process and act as a deterrent to fraud. See
In 2008, Indiana's photo ID law was challenged, and it was upheld by the United States Supreme Court. Crawford v. Marion Cty. Election Bd. ,
Between 1995 and 2011, Black legislators and other individuals in Alabama argued at length about how requiring photo ID would disfranchise voters who lack access to vehicles and specifically about the anticipated effect of such requirements on Black voters. In the 2008 presidential election, Black voter turnout and political engagement increased significantly as compared to prior elections. However, the 2010 elections produced a Republican landslide and supermajorities in both the Alabama House and Senate, for the first time in 136 years. There was racially polarized voting in both the 2008 and 2010 elections. White Republicans' defeat of white Democrats led to a partisan divide in the Alabama Legislature. Prior to the 2010 election, the House had 60 Democrats, 34 of them white and 26 Black. After the 2010 election, there were 36 Democrats-ten white, 26 Black. In the Senate, the number of Black Democrats remained seven; white Democrats fell from 13 to four. There were no non-white Republicans. Thus, after 2010, 67% of the remaining Democrats were Black Legislators who represented Black districts.
In 2011, one of the priorities of the newly elected Alabama Legislature was the enactment of a bill that required photo ID to vote either in-person or absentee. House Bill 19 was pre-filed in the Alabama House of Representatives for the 2011 Legislative Session on February 25, 2011. The bill was considered by the House Standing Committee on Constitution, Campaigns, *1259and Elections, which acted favorably on it and recommended a substitute and an amendment. On March 22, 2011, the House considered whether to approve the substitute and the amendment; the substitute was adopted and the amendment was rejected. The House passed House Bill 19 by a largely party-line vote of 64-31. Some Black Legislators were vocal in their warnings that it would allegedly suppress voting by seniors and poor people who don't have easy access to transportation and decried it as "a step back to the days of poll taxes and literacy tests."
The Senate's Rules Committee added House Bill 19 to the "special order" calendar for June 9, 2011, the last day of the 2011 Legislative Session. On June 9, the Senate invoked cloture, a procedure used by the majority in a legislative assembly for ending debate and taking a vote, and passed the bill on a straight party-line vote. All Black Senators who were present voted against the bill. The Senate used cloture more frequently in 2011, 36 cloture votes in fact, once the Republicans had a supermajority allowing them to utilize it.
Governor Robert Bentley signed House Bill 19 into law on June 15, 2011. At that time, Alabama was still a "covered" State under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act and thus could not enforce the law without first obtaining preclearance from the U.S. Department of Justice or a federal three-judge court. By its terms, the Photo ID Law was not to become operative until the first statewide primary in June 2014. Republican Representative Kerry Rich was quoted as anticipating a "lengthy court battle and review by the U.S. Justice Department to see if the legislation complies with the 1965 Voting Rights Act."
In the 2011 Legislative Session, Republican Senator Scott Beason was the chair of the Senate Rules Committee and had influence over setting the legislative agenda. On June 17, 2011, just after the 2011 Legislative session concluded, Senator Beason's comments referring to Black voters as "aborigines" became publicly known through the trial testimony in United States v. McGregor. See
From the 1990s until his retirement in 2010, Republican Senator Larry Dixon sponsored photo ID bills like House Bill 19. In 1996 he made a comment to the effect that Alabama's lack of a photo ID law was "beneficial to the Black power structure" and "benefits Black elected leaders." In 2011, comments he made referring to Black voters as "illiterates," during the same recorded conversations that Senator Beason was involved in, also became publicly known through the trial testimony in United States v. McGregor. Senator Dixon was not in the Legislature when House Bill 19 was passed in 2011.
Several days before the Photo ID Law was passed, the same Legislature passed House Bill 56, a wide-ranging anti-immigration bill. Many of the same Legislators sponsored both bills. Black Legislators voted overwhelmingly in opposition to the anti-immigration bill. It contained a proof of citizenship requirement for voter registration. Anyone already registered was not required to provide proof of citizenship. Several of the Republican Legislators made prejudiced comments conflating Latinos with illegal immigrants in connection with promoting the bill, including Rep. Rich and Sen. Beason. Much of House Bill 56 was later invalidated by Federal courts.
*1260See , e.g., United States v. Alabama ,
In 2012, the same Legislature that passed the Photo ID Law passed a state legislative redistricting plan. In 2017, a three-judge court ruled that twelve majority-Black districts violated federal law and that the Legislature's redistricting was predominately motivated by race. Ala. Legis. Black Caucus v. Alabama ,
Alabama's Secretary of State, then Jim Bennett, did not issue administrative rules, educate the public, train election officials, issue photo ID cards, or otherwise implement the Photo ID Law before June 25, 2013. Taking some of those actions before that date would have violated Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act.
On June 25, 2013, the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Shelby County , declaring unconstitutional Section 4(b) of the Voting Rights Act, which is the coverage provision of Section 5 of the Act.
B. Alabama's Photo ID Law-Its Provisions and Operation
Alabama's Photo ID Law requires voters to present a valid photo ID to vote.
The Photo ID Law lists seven specific categories of valid photo ID:
(1) A valid Alabama driver's license or nondriver identification card which was properly issued by the appropriate state or county department or agency.
(2) A valid Alabama photo voter identification card issued under subsection (f) or other valid identification card issued by a branch, department, agency, or entity of the State of Alabama, any other state, or the United States authorized by *1261law to issue personal identification, provided that such identification card contains a photograph of the elector.
(3) A valid United States passport.
(4) A valid employee identification card containing the photograph of the elector and issued by any branch, department, agency, or entity of the United States government, this state, or any county, municipality, board, authority, or other entity of this state.
(5) A valid student or employee identification card issued by a public or private college, university, or postgraduate technical or professional school located within the state, provided that such identification card contains a photograph of the elector.
(6) A valid United States military identification card, provided that such identification card contains a photograph of the elector.
(7) A valid tribal identification card containing a photograph of the elector.
In addition to Alabama driver's licenses and nondriver IDs, Alabama allows voters to use driver's licenses and nondriver IDs issued by other States. The Alabama Law Enforcement Agency ("ALEA"), formerly the Alabama Department of Public Safety, handles initial issuances of driver's licenses and nondriver IDs, but renewals and duplicates are available in every county in Alabama from a Judge of Probate, a License Commissioner, or a Revenue Commissioner. Renewals and duplicates are also available from Self-Service Kiosks or the Alabama Online Driver License Issuance System. A grace period of 60 days after expiration of a driver's license exists for the purpose of driver's license renewal and the driver's license remains valid during that time. Under certain conditions, a driver's license that has been expired for three years or less can be renewed without going to an ALEA office. Persons 62 and older may obtain a "lifetime" nondriver ID that does not expire. There is a fee to obtain a driver's license. In addition to paying a fee for the driver's license, a person must present various forms of documentation to receive a driver's license, and some of those have fees.
ALEA also requires documentation to obtain a nondriver ID, such as birth and marriage certificates. However, and although not required by the Photo ID Law, Secretary Merrill has entered into a Memorandum of Understanding ("MOU") with ALEA, whereby if a person seeks an ALEA nondriver ID for the purposes of voting, the fee for the nondriver ID will be paid by the Secretary. As of the fall of 2017, ALEA had invoiced the Secretary for 33 voters who requested a nondriver ID for voting purposes. Another MOU was reached between the Secretary and the State's Department of Public Health ("ADPH") whereby the ADPH will perform searches for birth and marriage certificates for ALEA when a person requests a nondriver ID to vote but does not have a copy of the necessary underlying documentation and bill the Secretary for the search.
The Photo ID Law also provides for the Secretary to issue free photo voter ID cards specifically for the purposes of voting.
In order to obtain a free photo voter ID card, the voter must present
(1) A photo identity document, except that a non-photo identity document is acceptable if the document includes both the person's full legal name and date of birth.
(2) Documentation showing the person's date of birth.
(3) Documentation showing the person is registered to vote in this state.
(4) Documentation showing the person's name and address as reflected in the voter registration record.
Another way for a voter to meet the requirements to obtain a photo voter ID card is simply to complete a voter registration form or a voter registration update form and sign the same in front of an election official under penalty of perjury. Persons already registered to vote may submit a voter registration update form, even if nothing needs updating, and prove their identity with that update form alone. Voters in Alabama are currently required to update their registration when they move. Voter registration cuts off on the fifteenth day before each election, but the Boards of Registrars offices are required to stay open during the 14-day period leading to each election and on Election Days. Photo voter IDs are available to the voter at the Boards of Registrars' offices on Election Days, but are not available at polling places on Election Days.
Secretary Merrill contracted with Police & Sheriff's Press, Inc. ("PASP") to produce the photo voter ID cards at $8.00 each. When a voter applies for a photo voter ID card, a temporary card is issued on the spot at no cost to the voter. The permanent card is mailed to the voter, normally within ten business days. PASP began printing Alabama photo voter ID cards in February 2014. PASP printed 5,294 Alabama photo voter ID cards in *12632014, another 2,316 cards in 2015, another 4,429 in 2016, and 1,403 in 2017 (through June 30). As of June 30, 2017, Alabama had issued 13,442 free photo voter ID cards to voters, and the Secretary of State had paid more than $280,000 to PASP for card-printing and other services and equipment related to the photo voter ID program.
In 2014, then-Secretary of State Bennett first implemented the mobile ID unit program, the schedule for which was developed after contacting every mayor's office in the State. While he was Secretary of State, the mobile ID unit went to every county in the State, and it went to some counties more than once. It was stationed at a variety of locations, including churches, libraries, and malls. Secretary of State Merrill continued with the mobile ID unit when he was elected in 2015. He solicited input on the mobile ID unit's schedule from the Judges of Probate, as well as from members of the Alabama House and Senate. Secretary Merrill issued press releases informing voters about the photo ID requirement and announcing the mobile ID unit's upcoming locations. Poverty, household wealth, and racial demographics were not factors considered when scheduling locations for mobile ID unit visits. Secretary Merrill has said he tries to get the mobile ID unit to festivals and events throughout the State that are high traffic areas, and he tries not to have the unit go to the same places every year. For instance, the mobile ID unit has been to the Chilton County Peach Festival in Clanton, the Peanut Butter Festival in Brundidge in Pike County, the Peanut Festival in Dothan in Houston County, the Magic City Classic in Birmingham where Alabama State and Alabama A & M play football every year, the Tomato Festival in Slocomb in Geneva County, and the Rattlesnake Rodeo in Opp in Covington County. The mobile ID unit has made more than 350 visits across the State since 2014 and issued more than 850 photo voter IDs. As of April 12, 2017, 85% of mobile ID unit locations were more than a mile from a Board of Registrars' office. As of April 12, 2017, on average, mobile ID unit locations were open for 3.6 hours a day.
Voters may also request, through the Secretary of State's website, that the mobile ID unit come to their home or group to issue a photo voter ID card. The number of home visits actually made to date is fewer than ten. One of the mobile unit home visits came about from a member of the Legislature contacting Secretary Merrill to assist a constituent. Another was made for a plaintiff in this litigation. The Secretary has implemented a protocol whereby the voter is asked questions about his or her transportation options before a home visit is scheduled. Nonetheless, Secretary Merrill has made clear that if the voter says he has no one to give him a ride, the voter is taken at his word: "Now, if they choose not to be honest, then we'll accept it." He emphasized that "we're not going to-nobody is ever going to be denied a voter ID."
As noted, a voter without a photo ID may also cast a regular ballot if two election officials positively identify him or, if not, a provisional ballot. There are at least four election officials at each polling place, and sometimes more than four. For election officials to positively identify a voter, they must be personally acquainted with the voter. Under the Secretary's interpretation, there is no requirement that the poll workers affirmatively inform voters about the positively identify provision. However, a sign posted in polling places lists examples of the valid forms of photo ID, and states, "If you do not have any of the above listed forms of identification, you will be permitted to vote by either of the following two ways:...2. The Voter is positively identified by two election officials as *1264a voter on the poll list and the election officials sign an Affidavit for Identifying Elector." The Secretary instructs poll officials not to positively identify voters whom they do not personally know.
In 2014, Jerome Gray, a member of Plaintiff Alabama NAACP, assisted two Black voters who lacked an acceptable photo ID, but knew two of their poll officials. However, the white chief inspector (who is the head of the polling place) refused to let them vote at all and insisted that everyone had to show photo
Former plaintiff Edna Williams, who is Black and lacked the required photo ID, voted by using the positively identify provision. Jewel Castophney is a Black voter who regularly votes using the positively identify provision. She stated that she knows all of her poll workers, they are always the same people (though one died this year), and they are all Black. Ms. Castophney was not issued a photo voter ID card at a mobile ID unit visit because the Secretary of State erroneously believed that she already possessed a nondriver ID that could be used for voting. In any event, Ms. Castophney applied again for a free photo voter ID on November 1, 2017, and her application was pending at the time of her deposition. She also testified that she did not want it to vote and did not realize it was intended for this purpose only; she routinely uses the positively identify provision to vote. She wanted a State-issued ID for other purposes and she testified that she would not have applied for one if she had understood that it was only for voting.
Josh Wahl is a white registered voter who, for religious reasons, lacks an acceptable photo
Secretary Bennett's Deputy Secretary of State, Emily T. Marsal, testified that his office met with citizens and groups to explain the requirements and implementation of the Photo ID Law and "spent substantial time and resources" on an education program that included billboards and radio and television advertisements. After taking office, Secretary Merrill determined to budget roughly $350,000 for advertising per election, which represented a cut to approximately one third of previous administration's expenditures. Nonetheless, between October 2013 and January 2017, the Secretary of State's office has spent more than $2.6 million advertising the Photo ID Law. For example, in January 2017, Secretary Merrill mailed a postcard to the address on file for every registered voter. In part, the post card said: "Remember, you need a valid photo ID to vote, unless exempt by law. If you do not have one, you may obtain a free photo voter ID at any Board of Registrars' office. To learn more, please visit our website at alabamavoterid.com, or contact your registrars."
Secretary Merrill has not offered any advertisements or publications related to the Photo ID Law in Spanish. However, he has provided Spanish translation of some materials upon request. Secretary Merrill's chief of staff is Mexican-American and *1265speaks Spanish, and his mother has translated some of the materials for voters.
On September 30, 2015, the Governor and the Secretary of ALEA announced that ALEA would permanently close 31 part-time ALEA driver's license-issuing offices, including offices in eight of eleven contiguous counties in the so-called "Black belt"-a string of counties where more than 130,000 eligible voters reside, nearly half of whom are Black, and where the Black poverty rate is 41%. On October 2, 2015, Plaintiffs Greater Birmingham Ministries and the Alabama NAACP wrote to notify the Governor, Secretary of ALEA, and the Secretary of State that they believed that "[b]y closing the[ ] [ALEA] offices, the State will drastically reduce the number of sites where potential voters can obtain photo ID, creating a substantial and disproportionate burden on African Americans' ability to participate in the political process in Alabama." The Governor announced on October 16, 2015, that, rather than close completely, the 31 affected ALEA offices would remain open one day per month. Secretary Merrill publicly denied that any change in office hours prevented any person from voting. The hours of the offices of the Boards of Registrars, where voters may obtain a free photo ID for voting, were not affected by changes in ALEA office hours.
C. The Parties
1. Plaintiff Greater Birmingham Ministries
Plaintiff Greater Birmingham Ministries, founded in 1969, is a multi-faith, multi-racial organization that provides emergency services for people in need in the greater Birmingham, Alabama area. A central goal of Greater Birmingham Ministries is the pursuit of social justice in the governance of Alabama. Greater Birmingham Ministries actively opposes state laws, policies, and practices that it believes result in the exclusion of vulnerable groups or individuals from the democratic process. Toward that end, Greater Birmingham Ministries regularly engages in efforts to register, educate, and increase turnout among Black and Latino voters, as well as low-income voters in general. Greater Birmingham Ministries has participated in lawsuits intended to vindicate these principles.
2. Plaintiff Alabama NAACP
Plaintiff Alabama NAACP is a state subsidiary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Inc. The Alabama NAACP is the oldest and one of the most significant civil rights organizations in Alabama, and it works to ensure the political, educational, social, and economic equality of Black citizens and all citizens. Two central goals of the Alabama NAACP are to eliminate racial discrimination in the democratic process and to enforce federal laws and constitutional provisions securing voting rights. Toward those ends, the Alabama NAACP has participated in numerous lawsuits intended to protect the right to vote, regularly engages in efforts to register and educate Black voters, and encourages Black citizens to engage in the political process by turning out to vote on Election Day.
3. Plaintiff Giovana Ambrosio
Giovana Ambrosio is a lawfully registered Latina voter, U.S. citizen, and resident of Franklin County, Alabama. Ms. Ambrosio was a high school senior when she became a plaintiff. She rode the bus to school and several days a week stayed after school for extracurricular activities. She also worked during the summer while off of school. Ms. Ambrosio was registered to vote prior to the March 1, 2016 primary, but Secretary Merrill maintains that she was not registered in time to vote in that election. Ms. Ambrosio went to the polls for the March 1, 2016 primary. She was *1266not personally acquainted with the election officials at her polling place that day, nor did she possess any of the types of photo ID required to vote.
For the entirety of 2016, the closest driver's license-issuing ALEA office to Ms. Ambrosio's home was only open one day per month, during the hours that Ms. Ambrosio typically spent in classes or in school-sponsored and school-supervised extracurricular activities. The next closest ALEA office to Ms. Ambrosio is located in Sheffield, which is an approximately 45-mile drive roundtrip. The Sheffield office is open from 8:00 am to 4:30 pm on weekdays. At the time of her August 2016 deposition, Ms. Ambrosio did not own a car or know how to drive one. Although her parents have access to vehicles, both parents work full-time and were unable to drive her to Sheffield during the ALEA office's normal hours. For example, her father leaves for work as early as 4:00 am and works up to twelve hours or more per day. Ms. Ambrosio's mother begins her work shift at 4:00 pm and also works until late in the evening. To the best of Ms. Ambrosio's knowledge, there is no public transportation from Franklin County to Sheffield. However, the Board of Registrars' office at the Franklin County courthouse is approximately one mile from Ms. Ambrosio's home.
Ms. Ambrosio started classes at Northwest Shoals Community College in the fall of 2016. Before classes begin, students register and pay for classes at the cashier's office. They are told then to go across the hall to the Student Success Center to get their picture taken for their student
4. Plaintiff Shameka Harris
Plaintiff Shameka Harris is a 33-year-old lawfully registered Black voter, U.S. citizen, and resident of Sumter County, Alabama. Although Ms. Harris has previously voted in-person using a photo or non-photo ID under Alabama's previous 2003 voter ID law, her unexpired ALEA nondriver photo ID was stolen, along with her wallet, in 2014. Ms. Harris does not own a car. She pays private individuals to drive her anywhere that is not within the immediate walking distance of her home. Ms. Harris lives with her boyfriend. In early 2017, he bought a car. He uses the car to drive to his two jobs. Ms. Harris does not drive his car. Ms. Harris lives on a fixed income.
In 2016, Ms. Harris possessed an expired nondriver photo ID, which she could not use to vote. Ms. Harris did not attempt to vote in November 2016 because she knew that voters needed to have a photo ID and she did not have one at the time.
Before her March 2017 deposition, and after the November 2016 election, Ms. Harris was told by a case worker that she needed to get a photo ID in order to receive food stamps. About two days later, *1267she went to Livingston to update her voter registration and then took that to the ALEA office and got a new nondriver
Ms. Harris has a copy of her birth certificate. Ms. Harris has a smart phone with Internet access. She must pay for data to use the Internet.
Even though her Medicaid card was stolen, Ms. Harris believes that it should be sufficient proof of her identity to vote. The Medicaid card does not have a photo on it.
5. Former Plaintiff Debra Silvers
Former Plaintiff Debra M. Silvers passed away in January 2017. At the time she passed, she was a plaintiff in this lawsuit and her deposition had been taken. Ms. Silvers was a 37-year-old lawfully registered Black voter, U.S. citizen, and resident of Greene County, Alabama. Ms. Silvers had previously voted in person using her ALEA-issued nondriver photo
Prior to March 1, 2016, Ms. Silvers had obtained photocopies of her nondriver ID but not a new nondriver
6. Plaintiff Elizabeth Ware
Plaintiff Elizabeth Ware is a sixty year-old, lawfully registered Black voter, U.S. citizen, and resident of Mobile County, Alabama. Ms. Ware's nondriver photo ID was stolen in 2014. Ms. Ware lives in Prichard. The License Commission in Mobile County issues renewals and duplicates of driver's licenses and nondriver IDs at five locations in Mobile County, including one in Prichard. The Prichard office is open 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays. Ms. Ware has a Medicaid card and a social security card. Ms. Ware testified that she tried to get a photo voter ID from the Mobile County Board of Registrars' office and was turned away because she had previously held a nondriver
Ms. Ware lives on a fixed income, does not have reliable access to transportation, and does not own a vehicle. Her health limits her ability to walk to the nearest bus *1268stop, though she has walked to a polling place near her home. Although members of Ms. Ware's family can sometimes provide her with rides, their work schedules often prevent her family members from giving her rides during the day. Ms. Ware did not have a photo ID at the time of the March 1, 2016 primary election and the November 2016 general election.
At her deposition, Ms. Ware expressed interest in arranging for the mobile unit to come to her home. On March 10, 2017, two employees of the Secretary of State's office traveled more than 150 miles one-way to Ms. Ware's residence to issue her a photo
7. Defendant Secretary Merrill
Defendant John H. Merrill is being sued in his official capacity as the Secretary of State of Alabama. The Secretary of State is Alabama's chief election official. He is charged with issuing photo voter ID cards and informing the public about the Photo ID Law's requirements. See
D. Statistical Data and Expert Testimony
According to the 2010 Census, Alabama's total population of roughly 4.7 million people is 67% white, 26% Black, and 3% Latino. According to the 2014 American Community Survey ("ACS"), Alabama's voting age population ("VAP") of 3.6 million people is 69% white, 26% Black, and 1% Latino. According to a U.S. Census survey of Alabamians from November 2014, 41.5% of the Latino citizen VAP, 64.6% of the Black citizen VAP, and 65.8% of the white citizen VAP were registered to vote in Alabama. Based on the information contained in the voter file for all active and inactive registered voters as of July 6, 2016, Black people make up approximately 26.8% of Alabama's registered voter population, Hispanics make up approximately 0.8% of Alabama's registered voter population, and whites make up approximately 70.1% of Alabama's registered voter population.
According to the 2009-2013 ACS, eleven of Alabama's 67 counties have a majority-Black population. Each of these counties has a higher Black-alone population than the State as a whole: Macon County (81.2%), Greene County (80.8%), Lowndes County (74.0%), Sumter County (73.1%), Wilcox County (72.9%), Bullock County (70.9%), Dallas County (68.8%), Perry County (68.3%), Hale County (59.1%), Montgomery County (55.2%), and Marengo County (52.1%). According to the 2009-2013 ACS, none of Alabama's 67 counties has a majority Latino population.
According to the 2015 ACS one-year estimates, statewide, 27.1% of Black and 23.6% of Hispanic households do not have a computer at home and 41.8% of Black households and 41.2% of Hispanic households do not have a high-speed Internet subscription. This compares to 16.2% of white households which do not have a computer at home and 27.7% of white households without a high-speed Internet subscription. According to the 2015 ACS one-Year Estimates, 12.9% of Latino Alabamians, 16.4% of Black Alabamians and 26.9% of white Alabamians have received a bachelor's degree or higher.
Alabama does not provide state funding of public transit. Student and government employee photo IDs are disproportionately held by racial minorities in Alabama.
Plaintiffs' expert, Dr. Bernard Siskin, analyzed whether there is a racial disparity between white voters and voters of color in photo ID possession rates in Alabama. To conduct his analyses, Dr. Siskin first *1269calculated the rates at which registered Alabama voters lack photo ID based on a comparison of voter data available in the Secretary's voter registration database to Alabama's driver's license and non-driver ID database as of July 6, 2016. He also relied on matches between the voter registration database and certain federal ID databases identified by the Department of State, Department of Defense, and Veterans Administration after these federal agencies were provided with the relevant portions of the voter database. In his first analysis, Dr. Siskin considered a voter to "possess" acceptable photo ID even if some of the voter's personal information (e.g., name, age) in the voter registration database did not perfectly match that voter's information in an ID database. Under this analysis, he determined that 1.37% of white, 2.44% of Black, and 2.29% of Hispanic registered voters lack any form of acceptable photo
Dr. Siskin further refined his analysis in light of a survey conducted by Dr. David Marker, another of Plaintiffs' experts. Dr. Marker surveyed a subset of those voters who could not be matched in the ID databases to ask whether they possessed any form of acceptable photo ID, as well as other questions. Of the responses that Dr. Marker received in his survey, 80 respondents indicated that the person to whom the survey was addressed is deceased. In addition, 1,933 questionnaires were returned as undeliverable, and an additional 784 persons to whom the survey was addressed were considered ineligible because they no longer lived at the sampled address. In any event, Dr. Marker concluded that 84.0% of white voters, 82.0% of Black voters, and 86.3% of Hispanic voters on the no-match list have photo IDs.
Thus, in Dr. Siskin's second analysis, he considered whether a photo ID would be "contestable," i.e., "potentially susceptible to rejection" by election officials. For example, Dr. Siskin identified numerous photo IDs where both the first and last name on the ID did not match the name in the voter registration database. Under this approach, and applying Dr. Marker's survey conclusions, Dr. Siskin determined that the percentages could actually be higher: that 3.33% of white, 5.49% of Black, and 6.98% of Hispanic registered voters have lack adequate photo ID that could be used to vote. In the end, however, Dr. Siskin, expressed an opinion that an estimated 50,106 (1.67%) registered voters in Alabama have no valid photo ID that is accepted under the photo ID law, which comes out to 29,491 whites (1.37%), 20,087 Blacks (2.44%), and 528 Hispanics (2.29%). He continued to estimate, however, that an additional 68,046 voters have IDs that have material name discrepancies such that they may be contested at the polls.
The Secretary's expert, Dr. M.V. Hood III, found that 0.87% of white, 1.44% of Black, and 1.26% of Hispanic registered voters lack photo
Dr. Siskin also performed an analysis of how far voters on the no-match list live from ALEA offices and Boards of Registrars' offices. According to Dr. Siskin's April 24, 2017 report, 69,704 voters without a useable photo ID live at least five miles from an ID-issuing office. Of these voters, 20,863 (29.93%) are Black, 992 (1.42%) are Hispanic, and 47,848 (68.65%) are white. Excluding "contestable" IDs from the analysis, the results total 27,941 registered voters who live more than five miles away from either an ALEA office or a registrars' office of which 17,933 (64.18%) are white, 9,672 (34.61%) are Black, and 336 (1.20%) are Hispanic.
Dr. Hood, the Secretary's expert, took Dr. Siskin's numbers and demonstrated that, according to Dr. Siskin's own data, Black and Hispanic voters without photo IDs are actually more likely than white *1270voters without photo IDs to live within five miles of a Board of Registrars' office, which offers the easiest-to-obtain, and free, photo
In Dr. Hood's May 16, 2017 declaration, he removed additional categories of voters from the no-match list, including those exempted from having to show photo ID to vote for various reasons, such as living in a nursing home and being disabled. While Dr. Siskin did not agree with the removals, he conducted an additional analysis, providing the "benefit of the doubt" to Dr. Hood regarding some (but not all) of Dr. Hood's assumptions, regarding who should be removed from the no-match list and/or the study population. With those registered voters removed, Dr. Siskin estimated that 47,997 voters without a usable photo ID live at least five miles from either an ALEA office or a registrars' office. Of these voters, 33,010 are white, 14,281 are Black, and 706 are Hispanic.
Estimates were also made concerning voters who neither owned a vehicle nor had access to a vehicle. An estimate, using census tract data, indicates that 6.1% of households in Alabama have zero vehicles in the household, 8.19% of voters without a usable photo ID have no vehicle nor live in a household with a vehicle, and 12.08% of Black voters without a useable photo ID have no vehicle nor live in a household with a vehicle, compared to 5.71% of whites. The data also indicates that 2,028 white (53.6%), 1,717 Black (45.3%), and 42 Hispanic (1.1%) voters without a usable photo ID live more than five miles from either an ALEA office or a registrars' office and have no vehicle or live in a household without a vehicle. Dr. Siskin also calculated these figures excluding "contestable" IDs from the analysis. The results total 1,597 registered voters who live more than five miles away from either an ALEA office or a Board of Registrars' office of which 776 are white, 807 are Black, and 14 are Hispanic. When certain registered voters identified by Dr. Hood are removed, Dr. Siskin found 1,403 white (54%), 1,168 Black (44.9%), and 29 Hispanic (1.1%) voters without a useable photo ID, who live at least five miles from either an ALEA office or a registrars' office and have no vehicle nor live in a household with a vehicle.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The standard of review for cross-motions for summary judgment does not differ from the standard applied when only one party files a motion, but simply requires a determination of whether either of the parties deserves judgment as a matter of law on the facts that are not disputed. Am. Bankers Ins. Group v. United States ,
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Alabama's Photo ID Law Does Not Violate the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution
Plaintiffs claim in Counts Three and Four of the Second Amended Complaint that the Photo ID Law violates the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. The Fourteenth Amendment prohibits a State from denying any person the "equal protection of the laws." U.S. Const. Amend. XIV. The Fifteenth Amendment, ratified in the wake of the Civil War, provides that "[t]he right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude." U.S. Const. Amend. XV.
To prevail on both their Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendment claims, Plaintiffs must show that the Alabama Legislature passed the Photo ID Law with a racially discriminatory intent or for a racially discriminatory purpose. See Vill. of Arlington Heights v. Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp. ,
This is not to say, however, that Plaintiffs are absolved from any burden to show that the Photo ID Law also actually discriminates on the basis of race. The Supreme Court has held that an allegation of a defendant's intent or motivation to discriminate, standing alone, is not sufficient to state a claim under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Palmer v. Thompson ,
The Court first turns to the task of "[p]roving discriminatory motivation behind official action," which the Supreme *1272Court has described as "a problematic undertaking." Hunter v. Underwood ,
In support of their contention that the Alabama Legislature enacted the Photo ID Law with the intent to discriminate against racial minorities, Plaintiffs cite many things, among them: a history of voter discrimination in Alabama; racist statements (referring to Black voters as "illiterates" and "aborigines") made by several Legislators during recorded conversations contemporaneous to the passage of the Photo ID Law but that did not involve the Photo ID Law; the fact that the same Legislature that passed the Photo ID Law passed an anti-immigration bill and a redistricting plan, parts of both which were later invalidated by courts; that the Legislator who sponsored both the Photo ID Law and the anti-immigration bill made various prejudiced comments about Latino citizens during his speech introducing the anti-immigration bill; that the Legislature's efforts to pass a photo voter ID bill coincided with a rising increase in Black people becoming registered voters in 1995 under the National Voter Registration Act, which allowed people to register at motor vehicle and public welfare agencies; that the Legislature's passage of a 2003 voter ID law, which allowed various forms of non-photo ID to vote, was the result of a negotiation between the Black Caucus and white Republicans in which, in exchange for Republicans agreeing to not block a re-enfranchisement bill for people with felonies, the Black Caucus would agree not to block a voter ID bill; statements made in 1996 to the effect that Alabama's lack of a photo ID law was "beneficial to the Black power structure" and "benefits Black elected leaders" by a Legislator who retired before the 2011 passage of the Photo ID Law; that the law's sponsor expected a "lengthy court battle" with the Department of Justice regarding whether it would be precleared under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act; the fact that the Legislature *1273invoked cloture and truncated debate during the passage of the law; that there was no voter education or release of administrative rules with respect to the law until after the Supreme Court issued its decision in Shelby County rendering the preclearance requirement null and void; and that there is a lack of evidence of any significant in-person voter fraud in Alabama that would be prevented by the Photo ID Law.
In response, Secretary Merrill argues that the Photo ID Law was not passed with a discriminatory purpose but was passed to combat voter fraud, increase voter confidence, and to modernize elections, all policies held by the Supreme Court to be legitimate and furthered by a photo ID law. See Crawford ,
In other election law cases, it has been appropriate for the trier of fact to engage in the delicate and highly fact-sensitive consideration of the kinds of testimony and historical facts that are summarized above. See Prejean v. Foster ,
*1274Law does not in fact discriminate on the basis of race.
Plaintiffs' expert Dr. Bernard Siskin says there are around 50,000 registered voters in Alabama (or 1.67% of the registered voter population) who may not have any of the forms of photo ID that may be used for voting.
Also according to Dr. Siskin, 1.37% of white registered voters, 2.44% of Black registered voters, and 2.29% of Hispanic registered voters may not currently have an acceptable photo
But in the end, Dr. Siskin's estimate does not matter. This is because a person who does not have a photo ID today is not prevented from voting if he or she can easily get one, and it is so easy to get a photo ID in Alabama, no one is prevented from voting.
*1275Anyone without a photo ID can obtain one for the sole purpose of voting, free of charge. These IDs can be obtained at Secretary Merrill's office at the State Capitol Building in Montgomery, any Board of Registrars' office, located in each county and open during daily business hours, or to an event where the Secretary's mobile ID unit is visiting. Since 2014, the Secretary's mobile unit has appeared in each county in Alabama at least once each year, and at various locations throughout the county. While polling places do not offer the free voter photo IDs on Election Day, if a person shows up to the polls on Election Day without a qualifying photo ID, he or she may still cast a provisional ballot, obtain a free voter photo ID within the next several days (they are available at the other locations on Election Days and in the days thereafter, such as at each Board of Registrar's office, and a temporary ID is issued immediately), and return to cure the ballot. The Supreme Court and the Eleventh Circuit have held that an inconvenience of this type is not a substantial burden on the right to vote. Crawford ,
To get a free voter photo ID, a voter must establish the following information:
(1) A photo identity document, except that a non-photo identity document is acceptable if the document includes both the person's full legal name and date of birth.
(2) Documentation showing the person's date of birth.
(3) Documentation showing the person is registered to vote in this state.
(4) Documentation showing the person's name and address as reflected in the voter registration record.
Another, even simpler, way to satisfy the statute's requirement is by signing a voter registration form (which requests all of the information required above) or updating an existing voter registration form (even if nothing needs updating), under oath, in front of an election official, thereby confirming the voter's identity. The availability of this option establishes that every single registered voter in Alabama, or potential registered voter, can obtain a photo ID in this fashion at no charge. If someone was never issued a birth certificate, she still can get a photo ID by attesting to her identity through a registration form or update form.
Additionally, if a voter cannot get to a registrar's office or to an event where the mobile ID unit is temporarily stationed, Secretary Merrill will bring the mobile unit to the voter's home and issue a photo ID, also at no cost to the voter. That means that the only way the photo ID law could prevent a person from voting is if that person is unable or unwilling to request a home visit from the mobile unit. Plaintiffs point out that the record shows fewer than ten home visits made by the mobile unit, one of which required a state Legislator to personally contact the Secretary to request the visit for a constituent, and another for a plaintiff in this case, and that while a person can request a home visit through the Secretary's website, such a request does not necessarily guarantee that a representative from the Secretary's office will make a home visit because the Secretary has implemented a protocol whereby the voter is asked questions about his or her transportation options. Nonetheless, Secretary Merrill has made clear that if the voter says he has no one to give him a ride, the voter is taken at his word: ("Now, if they choose not to be honest, then we'll accept it."). He emphasized that "we're not going to-nobody is ever going to be denied a voter ID." Thus, Plaintiffs have not disputed that a voter who truly needs a home visit can get one. This fact, plus the fact that all it takes is signing a voter registration form or update form, means that any Alabama voter who wants one can get a photo
Plaintiffs also cite to the declaration of Jewel Castophney, a Black registered voter who was denied a free voter ID by a representative of Secretary Merrill's office at a mobile unit event because of the erroneous belief that she already had an acceptable ID and therefore did not need one. Due to the cost incurred by the State in printing the free voter ID cards, they are intended for use only by individuals who do not already have some other form of qualifying photo ID that can be used for voting. In any event, Ms. Castophney applied again for a free voter ID on November 1, 2017, and her application was pending during her deposition. She also testified that she did not want it to vote and did not realize it was intended for this purpose only; she routinely uses the positively identify provision to vote. She wanted a State-issued ID for other purposes and she testified that she would not have applied for one if she had understood that it was only for voting. Plaintiffs also cite Plaintiff Elizabeth Ware, who says she was told that she could not get a free voter photo ID card because in the past she had possessed an ALEA-issued
Moreover, the individual plaintiffs' situations demonstrate that people who want a photo ID can get one. Giovanna Ambrosio could participate in after-school activities, go to work every day in the summer, and make a 25-30 minute trip to go to college classes, but says she could not get to a registrars' office that was a mile from her house. Before the 2016 general election, she managed to make the one-mile trip and got her
In sum, the "impact" of the law should not be measured by how many people lack a given ID at a given point in time, but by whether someone without an ID can easily get one. In Alabama, the law has no discriminatory impact because it does not prevent anyone from voting, not when free IDs are issued in every county, or at home, under conditions that any registered voter can meet.
One test for whether the Alabama Legislature intended to discriminate is whether it did, in fact, discriminate. As discussed above, it did not. It would serve no purpose for this Court to further consider the other Arlington Heights factors (the historical background of the law, contemporaneous statements made by Legislators, departures from normal legislative procedures, etc., see
Two additional points remain. First, the Court finds that Alabama had "important regulatory interests" in enacting a photo ID requirement, namely, to combat voter fraud, increase confidence in elections, and modernize election procedures. See , e.g., Common Cause/Georgia ,
Second, the Court notes that the record in this case is very different than the evidence before the Fourth Circuit when it held that North Carolina's photo ID law was passed with discriminatory intent. In McCrory , the Fourth Circuit concluded that the North Carolina process targeted Black voters with "almost surgical precision."
For all of the foregoing reasons, Secretary Merrill is entitled to summary judgment in his favor on Plaintiffs' constitutional claims.
B. Alabama's Photo ID Law Does Not Violate Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act
Plaintiffs claim in Count One of the Second Amended Complaint that the Photo ID Law violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Subsection (a) of Section 2 forbids any "standard, practice, or procedure" that "results in the denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color."
The "structure or practice" identified by Plaintiffs is the Photo ID Law's requirement that every voter provide a photo ID either at the time of voting or within several days thereafter. Plaintiffs argue that, because Black and Latino voters are less likely to possess photo ID, the requirement imposes a disparate burden that has the effect of denying them the equal opportunity to vote. The Secretary responds that there is no evidence that any voter will be denied an equal opportunity to vote because the law makes it so easy to obtain the necessary photo
Thus, just as in Lee v. Virginia State Board of Elections , "[a] complex § 2 analysis is not necessary to resolve this issue because the plaintiffs have simply failed to provide evidence that members of the protected class have less of an opportunity than others to participate in the political process."
*1280And in Virginia, as in Alabama, a person who shows up at the polls without a photo ID can cast a provisional ballot that may be cured by later presenting a photo
Every decision that a State makes in regulating its elections will, inevitably, result in somewhat more inconvenience for some voters than for others. For example, every polling place will, by necessity, be located closer to some voters than to others. To interpret § 2 as prohibiting any regulation that imposes a disparate inconvenience would mean that every polling place would need to be precisely located such that no group had to spend more time traveling to vote than did any other. Similarly, motor-voter registration would be found to be invalid as members of the protected class were less likely to possess a driver's license. Yet, courts have also correctly rejected that hypothetical. See Frank v. Walker ,768 F.3d 744 , 754 (7th Cir. 2014), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----,135 S.Ct. 1551 ,191 L.Ed.2d 638 (2015).
We conclude that § 2 does not sweep away all election rules that result in a disparity in the convenience of voting. As we noted in North Carolina State Conference of NAACP v. McCrory ,831 F.3d 204 , 241 (4th Cir. 2016), "it cannot be that states must forever tip-toe around certain voting provisions" that would have more effect on the voting patterns of one group than another. Rather, § 2 asks us to evaluate whether the Virginia process has diminished the opportunity of the protected class to participate in the electoral process. If Virginia had required voters to present identifications without accommodating citizens who lacked them, the rule might arguably deprive some voters of an equal opportunity to vote. But where, as here, Virginia allows everyone to vote and provides free photo IDs to persons without them, we conclude that SB 1256 provides every voter an equal opportunity to vote and thus does not violate § 2 of the Voting Rights Act.
Id. at 600-01.
The same is true here. The issue is not who has or does not have a photo ID at present. The issue is whether the Photo ID Law denies members of a minority group the opportunity to reasonably get one, assuming they want one. "[A] § 2 challenge based purely on a showing of some relevant statistical disparity between minorities and whites, without any evidence that the challenged voting qualification causes that disparity, will be rejected." Gonzalez v. Arizona ,
Minorities do not have less opportunity to vote under Alabama's Photo ID law, because everyone has the same opportunity to obtain an
C. The Positively Identify Provision of Alabama's Photo ID Law Does Not Violate Section 201 of the Voting Rights Act
In Count Two of the Second Amended Complaint, Plaintiffs attacked the Photo ID Law's exemption for those voters who can be "positively identified" by two election officials. See
Section 201 categorically prohibits the use of "any test or device" as a voting qualification, stating that "[n]o citizen shall be denied, because of his failure to comply with any test or device, the right to vote in any Federal, State, or local election conducted in any State or political subdivision of a State."
Earlier in this litigation this Court denied Plaintiffs' request for a preliminary injunction to enjoin application of the positively identify provision, reasoning that Plaintiffs were not likely to succeed on their Count Two claim because the positively identify provision is not a requirement that must be met before voting. Greater Birmingham Ministries v. Alabama ,
Nonetheless, Plaintiffs now seek, as part of their Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, a legal ruling that the positively identify provision is a prohibited test or device within the meaning of Section 201. (See doc. 234.) They continue to argue that the thousands of registered voters in Alabama who lack a photo ID are "required" to use the positively identify provision as their sole means of voting. That is simply not true: the voter can instead go to the Board of Registrars' office or schedule a home visit to get one.
The facts discussed in the previous two sections above related to the ease of obtaining a photo ID show that no one in Alabama is "required" to rely on the positively identify provision because they have the option of acquiring a photo ID with little to no effort and no cost. Far from an outlawed voucher requirement, the positively identify provision of the Photo ID Law offers an additional option that allows more individuals to vote than would be able to absent the provision. Before the Voting Rights Act was passed, Alabama and other states used literacy tests, poll taxes, and "good morals" requirements to discriminate against minorities. In some cases, voters were not permitted to cast a ballot unless they got a "voucher" from one or more other voters (and when almost all registered voters were white, Black voters were usually unable to find anyone to "vouch" for them). See generally United States v. Logue ,
Because the provision is not a requirement that must be met before voting, the Court need not determine whether it is being used in an improper manner.
The undisputed evidence thus confirms the Court's previous conclusion that the positively identify provision is not an illegal test or device within the meaning of Section 201 of the Voting Rights Act. Accordingly, Plaintiffs' Motion for Partial Summary Judgment insofar as it seeks a legal ruling to the contrary (see doc. 234) is due to be denied and Secretary Merrill is entitled to summary judgment on this claim.
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, Plaintiffs' Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (doc. 234) is due to be denied and Secretary Merrill's Motion for Summary Judgment (doc. 236) is due to be granted and this action dismissed in its entirety. A separate order consistent with this opinion will be entered contemporaneously herewith.
DONE AND ORDERED ON JANUARY 10, 2018.
ORDER
Before this Court are cross motions for summary judgment filed on September 29, 2017: 1) Motion for Summary Judgment as to all of Plaintiffs' claims filed by Defendant, John Merrill, in his official capacity as Alabama's Secretary of State ("Secretary Merrill") (Doc. 236), and 2) Motion for Partial Summary Judgment filed by Plaintiffs (Doc. 234).
For the reasons expressed in the accompanying Memorandum of Opinion, Secretary Merrill's Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 236) is hereby GRANTED . Plaintiffs' Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Doc. 234) is hereby DENIED. The above-entitled action is DISMISSED with prejudice.
Costs are taxed against Plaintiffs.
Also pending are three "Motions in Limine " filed by Secretary Merrill seeking to limit or exclude the scope of anticipated expert testimony by three of Plaintiffs' experts. (Docs. 215, 216, & 217.) For reasons contained herein, these motions are due to be denied as moot.
These facts are taken from the parties' "Undisputed Material Facts" section of their Joint Status Report, which was filed on December 22, 2017. (Doc. 265.) While the parties dispute the relevance and materiality of some of the facts contained herein, they agree that they are undisputed. The Court views the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party on each summary judgment motion. Chavez v. Mercantil Commercebank, N.A. ,
The parties have offered many other facts concerning topics such as the history of voter fraud in Alabama, findings of discriminatory intent in other laws passed in Alabama over the past fifty years, and the 2011 Legislature's anti-immigration bill and redistricting plan, to name just a few. The Court has not included all of the facts offered by the parties in this Memorandum of Opinion, but it has included what it believes to be the facts that are actually relevant to the legal issues in this case, along with other facts whose relevance is more tangential but which serve to provide context.
The Palmer Court explained that racially motivated legislation violates the Equal Protection Clause only when the challenged legislation "affect[s] blacks differently from whites."
Dr. Siskin also estimated that an additional 68,046 voters have what he called "contestable" photo IDs, or IDs that have material discrepancies between the name or other identifying information on the voter roll such that they may be contested at the polls. In total then, Dr. Siskin estimated that 118,152 registered voters have either no photo ID or have a "contestable" photo
To that end, and as more fully explained herein, Plaintiffs' request for summary judgment in their favor on this discrete issue, i.e., that Black and Hispanic voters are statistically less likely than white voters to possess one of the required forms of photo ID to vote in Alabama (see doc. 234), is due to be denied because issuing such a ruling would be superfluous to the Court's holding.
The challengers in Crawford and Common Cause/Georgia did not allege intentional race discrimination. Rather, they mounted facial attacks on photo ID requirements as unduly burdensome on the right to vote generally under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. The Crawford Court conducted the flexible Anderson -Burdick analysis, balancing the burden of having to show a photo ID to vote in person against Indiana's interests in deterring and detecting voter fraud, correcting maladministration of the voter rolls, and safeguarding voter confidence, concluding that the photo ID requirement "impose[d] only a limited burden on voters' rights."
Indeed, the mobile ID unit has issued free photo voter ID cards based upon the presentation of a wide variety of documents, including voter registration forms, registration update forms, arrest records, bank documents, Birmingham Housing Authority ID cards, expired county employee IDs, court paternity documents, fishing licenses, EBT cards, pay stubs, Sam's Club cards, and a ticket issued by a municipality.
Although Plaintiffs introduced the issue of religious objections to photo IDs in the facts section of their Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, through the anecdotal evidence concerning Joshua Wahl, they do not bring an equal protection claim of discrimination based on religion.
The Court thus need not consider Secretary Merrill's motion in limine to exclude the testimony of Plaintiffs' proposed expert, Morgan Kousser, Ph.D., a historian, whose opinion concerned the Alabama Legislature's intent in passing the Photo ID Law. (Doc. 216.) The motion is hereby DENIED AS MOOT .
To that end, the Court need not consider the opinion of Plaintiffs' proposed expert, Dr. Lonna Rae Atkeson, that photo ID laws do not increase voter confidence. Secretary Merrill filed a separate motion in limine to exclude her testimony. (Doc. 217.) The motion is hereby DENIED as MOOT .
Plaintiffs' attempts to distinguish Lee from this case fall flat. They contend that the fact that Alabama advises applicants for a free voter ID card that they are subject to felony perjury in swearing that they do not possess an alternate form of ID makes Alabama's process to obtain the free voter photo ID somehow more burdensome than Virginia's. They also note that Lee was decided after a trial on the merits, not at summary judgment, but the Court's independent review of the Lee docket reveals that Virginia did not seek a summary judgment ruling in its favor on the plaintiffs' Section 2 claim.
The Court also notes that although Plaintiffs do not bring a separate claim for violation of
To that end, the Court need not consider the opinion of Plaintiffs' proposed expert, Dr. Atkeson, about how many voters know their "check-in poll worker." Secretary Merrill's separately-filed motion in limine also sought to exclude this opinion. (Doc. 217.) As noted previously, the motion is moot.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- GREATER BIRMINGHAM MINISTRIES v. John MERRILL, in his official capacity as the Alabama Secretary of State
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published