The subject of Texas' Photo ID law will probably come up.
The NAACP vows to register 1 million new voters in time for the November
elections to overturn what leaders called an "onslaught of state
restrictions on voting."
Alluding to the long struggle of the nation's oldest and largest
civil rights organization, Board Chair Roslyn Brock insisted in the
opening address of the association's 103rd annual convention on Sunday
night that voting rights were again in jeopardy.
"Our right to vote is under attack more than at any other time in
history since we passed the Voting Rights Act of 1965," she said. "We
overcame then and we shall overcome now -- but only if we are willing to
dedicate ourselves to fighting a battle that many of us thought we had
won many years ago."
Attorney General Holder, while in Houston to speak to convention attendees today, will likely be paying attention to matters
back in Washington.
Texas will launch a challenge to a central piece of civil rights legislation in a Washington court on Monday in a case the Obama administration has characterised as a fight to protect the right to vote.
The
five-day hearing will rule on whether the US justice department has the
power to block Texas from implementing a state law requiring voters to
show photo identification at the polls – a move critics say will
disenfranchise hundreds of thousands of people, principally Latinos and
other minorities.
Yes, now that the RP of Tx has put
abolishment of the VRA into its party platform, we know that this is just another ingredient mashed into the stew of Daily/Weekly/Perpetual Outrages O'Day that conservatives have to keep stirring in order to stoke the anger and hatred that, in turn, motivates their base to turn out and vote.
Here's a few relevant excerpts from elsewhere.
Supporters of the (photo ID) laws cite anecdotal cases of fraud as a reason that
states need to do more to secure elections, but fraud appears to be
rare. As part of its effort to build support for voter ID laws, the
Republican National Lawyers Association last year published a report
that identified some 400 election fraud prosecutions over a decade
across the entire country. That's not even one per state per year. (emphasis is mine)
You can expect some of those "
supporters" to be seen outside the GRB "protesting" today.
Two of the three judges on the panel were
appointed by Democratic presidents so it might seem unlikely the court
would overturn the Obama administration.
[...]
The Texas lawsuit for approval of the voter
identification law is: State of Texas v. Holder in U.S. District Court
for the District of Columbia, No. 12-cv-128. The judicial panel is
composed of Appeals Judge David Tatel, District Judge Robert Wilkins and
District Judge Rosemary Collyer.
Mitt Romney is slated to speak on
Wednesday morning to the convention; Vice President Joe Biden is scheduled for
Thursday. There's probably time reserved for the president if he decides to make an appearance, but at this point that would be a surprise.
More as it develops.
Update:
Holder will not speak today because he was delayed at the airport, and has rescheduled for tomorrow, according to this
Tweet.