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PA Judge Stops Restrictive Voter ID Law For Election

Click here to read this post and others on the CWA Blog Resistance Growing.

Today a judge suspended Pennsylvania’s controversial voter ID law, ordering the state not to enforce the ID requirement in the upcoming presidential election. That means that all citizens, whether or not they have an official photo ID, will be able to vote without being forced to cast a provisional ballot.

CWA commends the court for acting to ensure that at least in the November elections, all Pennsylvanians will be able to exercise their right to vote. Voting is a cornerstone of our democracy, and the campaign in Pennsylvania to disenfranchise at least 750,000 citizens was a display of partisan politics at its most shameful.

CWA members have been working with the Pennsylvania NAACP, Transport Workers Union and Amalgamated Transit Union to register 25,000 new voters in the Keystone State. For weeks, activists throughout Pittsburgh and Philadelphia have been rushing to register voters and educate them about the new ID laws.

In his decision, Commonwealth Judge Robert Simpson acknowledged the difficulties faced by ordinary Pennsylvanians in meeting these new requirements:

I expected more photo IDs to have been issued by this time. For this reason, I accept Petitioners' argument that in the remaining five weeks before the general election, the gap between the photo IDs issued and the estimated need will not be closed.

But the law – among the toughest voter suppression measures in the country -- still could go into full effect next year under Simpson's ruling. CWA will be there with our partners to fight against these efforts that make it difficult for students, minorities, seniors, low-income workers and the disabled to exercise their rights to participate in the democratic election process.

How will you fight back?