Texas Government Photo-ID Case Appealed to U.S. Supreme Court

On October 15, various voting rights organizations appealed the Texas government photo-ID case to the U.S. Supreme Court. Here is the 19-page application in Veasey v Perry, 14A393. The document itself is considerably more than 19 pages, because of the attached appendices.

In this case, the U.S. District Court had invalidated the Texas law, and enjoined it. Then the Fifth Circuit had reversed and reinstated the law for the November 4, 2014 election. Thanks to Rick Hasen for the link.

UPDATE: here is the 40-page brief of the U.S. Solicitor General, who represents the U.S. Department of Justice, which is on the side of the voting rights organizations and against the state of Texas. Thanks to Scotusblog for that link.


Comments

Texas Government Photo-ID Case Appealed to U.S. Supreme Court — 2 Comments

  1. The top Donkey communists and Elephant fascists are playing their EVIL ANTI-Democracy gerrymander games – now using Elector stuff even more than ever.

    How soon before DNA proof is required that a person is a LEGAL USA citizen Elector — from 4 July 1776 and later – i.e. had a USA natural born or naturalized father –
    in the ALLEGIANCE chain ???

    How about have mandamus, injunction and stay stuff even on election days — to have TOTAL election *LAW* CHAOS ???

    —-
    P.R. and nonpartisan App.V. — and quite possibly DIVIDE the USA into 2 or more independent regimes — possible
    West, Central, East for starters —
    since the communists and fascists obviously can NO longer get along with each other in 1 regime — developing since 1914 or a bit earlier.

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