THEANGEL&THEGAMBLER
Rookie
Voter ID and driver's license office closures black-out Alabama's Black Belt
n 2011, Alabama lawmakers approved the state's voter ID law, making it illegal to vote in Alabama without a government-issued photo ID.
For most folks, that's a driver's license.
Closures announced Wednesday leave 29 Alabama counties without a place to get a driver's license.Kyle Whitmire | kwhitmire@al.com
In those 29 counties you might be able to register at the courthouse, but you won't be able to cast a ballot there unless you have that ID.
That's not just an inconvenience. That's a problem.
But it gets worse.
Look at the list of counties now where you can't get a driver's license. There's Choctaw, Sumter, Hale, Greene, Perry, Wilcox, Lowndes, Butler, Crenshaw, Macon, Bullock ...
If you had to memorize all the Alabama Counties in 9th grade, like I did -- and even if you forgot most of them, like I have -- you can probably guess where we're going with this.
Depending on which counties you count as being in Alabama's Black Belt, either twelve or fifteen Black Belt counties soon won't have a place to get a driver's license.
Counties where some of the state's poorest live.
Counties that are majority African-American.
Combine that with the federally mandated Star ID taking effect next year, and we're looking at a nightmare.
Or a trial lawyer's dream.
When the state passed Voter ID, Republican lawmakers argued that it was supposed to prevent voter fraud. Democrats said the law was written to disenfranchise black voters and suppress the voice of the poor.
Maybe, maybe not.
But put these two things together -- Voter ID and 29 counties without a place where you can get one -- and Voter ID becomes what the Democrats always said it was.
A civil rights lawsuit isn't a probability. It's a certainty.
You don't have to know what a three-point turn is to see where this truck is going.
It's only a matter of time before some lawyer takes the state where that test administrator took me -- back to the courthouse.