A 2011 law passed by Texas' GOP-dominated Legislature that requires voters to show photo identification when they get to the polls is being scrutinized this week by a federal court, but there's no question about what Attorney General Eric Holder thinks about it, and why: He said in remarks to the NAACP on Tuesday that he opposes the state's ID requirement in part because it would be harmful to minority voters, the Washington Post reports. He pledged that the Justice Department "will not allow political pretexts to disenfranchise American citizens of their most precious right."
Under the law passed in Texas, Holder said that "many of those without IDs would have to travel great distances to get them — and some would struggle to pay for the documents they might need to obtain them." …
"I don't know what will happen as this case moves forward, but I can assure you that the Justice Department's efforts to uphold and enforce voting rights will remain aggressive," the attorney general said.
He said the arc of American history has always moved toward expanding the electorate and that "we will simply not allow this era to be the beginning of the reversal of that historic progress."
The attorney general spoke at the 103rd convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which is launching a battle against new state voter ID laws. NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous has likened the fight against conservative-backed voter ID laws passed in several states to "Selma and Montgomery times," referring to historic Alabama civil rights confrontations of the mid-1960s.
Read more at the Washington Post.