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News ID: 70294
Publish Date : 10 September 2019 - 21:38

U.S. States Have Closed 1,200 Polling Places: Report

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - States across the American South have closed nearly 1,200 polling places since the Supreme Court weakened a landmark voting-discrimination law in 2013, according to a report released by a civil-rights group on Tuesday.
The Leadership Conference on Civil Rights found that states with a history of racial discrimination have shuttered hundreds of voting locations since the court ruled that they did not need federal approval to change their laws. The report did not have comparisons with polling places in other regions.
The report comes as Republican-led states impose a range of other restrictions, from shorter voting hours to photo-ID requirements. As turnout has surged in recent elections, voters in cities like Phoenix and Atlanta have endured hours-long waits to cast their ballots.
Seven counties in Georgia now only have one polling place, the report found.
Under the Voting Rights Act of 1965, areas with a history of voting discrimination - such as requiring African American or Hispanic voters to pay a poll tax or pass a literacy test - had to first convince the U.S. Justice Department or a federal court that any election changes they wished to make would not have had a discriminatory effect. The Supreme Court struck down that portion of the law in 2013.
"We don’t have that anymore - that’s the most troubling thing,” said Leigh Chapman, head of the civil rights group’s voting-rights program.
The law covered a swath of southern states stretching from Virginia to Texas, along with Arizona, Alaska and a few counties in states like New York, North Carolina, Florida, Michigan, South Dakota and California.
Voters in many U.S. states can now mail in their ballots or vote in person before Election Day. But most still cast their ballots in person in last year’s vote, just as they did in 2012, according to figures compiled by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission.
State election officials have cited a variety of reasons, from budget pressures to disability laws, for closing polling places, while officials in many parts of Texas and Arizona have tried to shift from neighborhood-based polling places to "voter centers” that accept ballots from all qualified citizens.
Those states saw the sharpest decrease in polling locations, according to the report.
Election officials in Texas have closed more than 1 in 10 voting locations statewide, according to data collected by the Leadership Conference, with the biggest drops in the counties surrounding Dallas and Austin, which have large Hispanic and African American populations.
In Arizona, more than 1 in 5 polling locations were closed, the data showed.
Georgia, Louisiana and Mississippi closed roughly 1 in 20 polling locations, while the declines were less dramatic in Alabama, Alaska and North Carolina.