A victory for democracy.
The voter ID law in NC was struck down by the the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals following a similar occurrence in WI yesterday.
I don't see the problem with having to show photo ID for voting. Over here in the Netherlands you have to bring your official passport / EU ID card. WHich has photo and fingerprint.
It's good for democracy to force the use of a document that's very hard to forge. It's bad for democracy if you can just come vote with a document without photo. Too easy to fraud.
As Lord Shonus said, a substantial portion of our population has no photo ID, and they are disproportionately poor minorities. It's a blatant attempt at disenfranchisement, and as far as I'm aware there have been
31 recorded cases of voter fraud (in the form of one individual impersonating another--gerrymandering, disqualified ballots, and other forms of institutional fraud are another matter) in the past fifteen years in the U.S. despite that being the supposed impetus for these laws. The total
potential count is less than five thousand votes nationwide through that entire time period, if one assumes that every single suspicious vote is fraud (rather than an error in documentation &c.)
It's no coincidence that they're enacted by strongly Republican assemblies, given that they directly target the Democratic base in major cities.
No state flatly required a photo ID to vote prior to the early 2000s except for (IIRC) Texas. Two or three have required one since the late '70s if you voted in person. Almost all were passed in the aforementioned fifteen year period, during which the hypothetical maximum number of fraudulent votes is still more than an order of magnitude below the number of valid ballots discarded
solely in the Florida districts which had recounts in the 2000 election. Just one more example of the shameless electioneering that the parties engage in basically without fear of reprisal.
e: ninja'd