INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana Supreme Court justices hearing arguments in the
latest lawsuit over the state’s voter identification law on Thursday
questioned why no victims were listed as plaintiffs.
The justices did most of the talking during the one-hour oral arguments that
were the latest in a string of lawsuits related to the politically charged
issue of whether the 2005 law requiring voters to show a photo ID at the
polls is unconstitutional.
The League of Women Voters argued that the law violates the state
constitution because it imposes a requirement on some voters but not all.
They noted that absentee voters aren’t required to prove their identity.
The state appeals court agreed in 2009 and threw out the law, but that
ruling was later vacated by a federal lawsuit and the ID requirement remains
in place. The Supreme Court will decide whether to uphold the appeals court
ruling or take up the matter further.
During Thursday’s arguments, Justice Frank Sullivan Jr. noted that the law
has been in effect through several elections and yet no people who have been
affected are named in the lawsuit.
“You standing before us without a single person who has been impinged upon
makes it hard to call this grossly unreasonable,” he said.
Karen Celestino-Horseman, the attorney representing the League of Women
Voters, said people have been hurt by the law and they could testify if the
court decides to take up the matter.
“We had individuals who have veteran’s benefits cards, and they couldn’t
vote,” she said. “They weren’t able to get the ID. One of them, it took a
state representative and a volunteer to go with them to the BMV to get the
ID. Not everyone has those resources.”
Celestino-Horseman was just getting into her 30 minutes of allotted argument
time when justices started tossing questions at her.
Sullivan was the first to cut in, asking whether the voter law had uncovered
any instances of voter fraud. Horseman said it hadn’t and launched briefly
back into her argument before Sullivan cut in with more questions. He asked
why Secretary of State Todd Rokita was named as the defendant in this case,
when Rokita advises on voting laws but isn’t responsible for enforcing them,
and why the plaintiffs used a different configuration of defendants and
plaintiffs than in their previous suit.
Justice Robert Rucker called the case a “facial challenge,” as opposed to an
application of the law, because there are no plaintiffs in the suit denied
the right to vote. The burden of proof is higher in this type of case,
Rucker said.
Rokita said the lack of named plaintiffs is telling.
“As the justices themselves observed on several occasions, not one actual
plaintiff has been presented who claims to have been denied the right to
vote because of our photo ID requirement,” he said in a statement after the
hearing. “Now that nine elections have been conducted under this law, it is
more than safe to say that the photo ID requirement achieves election
integrity without sacrificing voter access.”
The state’s attorney, Solicitor General Thomas Fisher, argued that the voter
identification law makes elections more modern, secure and honest.
Another key issue is whether exemptions to the photo ID requirement for
mail-in voters are inequitable. Justice Theodore Boehm asked Fisher whether
the ID requirement was just part of the election procedure or a
qualification to vote, as property ownership once was, which would make it
unconstitutional. Fisher said it was more a procedure.
But no former precedents say regulation can’t become a qualification if the
regulation poses a burden, Celestino-Horseman said in her rebuttal.
Fisher said the difficulties have been overstated by the law’s opponents and
that other lawful voting regulations necessarily impose some burdens.
“Voting is a
right not just to be given to the many,” Celestino-Horseman said after the
hearing. “It’s to be given to the all.”
Posted 3/5/2010