TERRE HAUTE — It must be interesting to be Todd Rokita these days. While the photo identification voter law he keeps calling “exemplary” has managed to disenfranchise a group of elderly nuns, the latest legal challenge to it comes from the non-partisan, roundly respected League of Women Voters in Indiana.
Might the secretary of state pause to wonder whether the nation’s strictest voter ID law — designed and passed by Indiana Republicans in 2005 — needs a bit of retooling?
Of course not. Rokita blew off the sisters, has sniped at the League for its action and implied selfish insensitivity by its members, saying their suit “will result in the resources of state government being focused on this issue yet again and once again at taxpayer expense.”
Rokita has as his primary put-down tool a 6-3 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in April that found the law is not federally unconstitutional on its face. Writing for the majority, Justice John Paul Stevens said the court’s decision might have been different if it had been brought on behalf of a specific voter whose rights were violated.
Never mind that 32 named examples of disenfranchisement submitted by the Marion County Board of Elections were part of the plaintiffs’ arguments before the high court — and zero examples of Hoosier voter fraud were part of the state’s. As Justice Stevens noted:
“The only kind of voter fraud that SEA 483 [the Indiana statute] addresses is in-person voter impersonation at polling places. The record contains no evidence of any such fraud actually occurring in Indiana at any time in its history.”
One of the 32 denied voters, Valerie Williams, had to cast a provisional ballot in November 2006 when she brought various bills and IDs that used to be sufficient in Indiana to the polling place in her retirement home. Williams, who needs a cane to walk, was unable to get to her local county elections office with a required photo ID within the mandated 10 days, thus her ballot was tossed.
Nevertheless, the six justices concluded that the great burden of proof had not been met by the plaintiffs, the Indiana ACLU and the Democratic Party.
Eight days later came the 2008 Indiana primary, when 10 Sisters of the Holy Cross in South Bend were turned away from their polling place — in their convent — because they did not possess proper state or federal identification. In their 80s and 90s, the nuns offered either expired passports or photo-less IDs. A younger sister from their order who was working the polls that day had to deliver the bad news.
The younger nun called the incident “heartbreaking.” Rokita’s office snapped back that the sisters knew about the new law and “didn’t want” to follow it.
Rokita never mentions the Sisters of the Holy Cross or Valerie Williams when he dismisses opponents of the photo ID law as overly concerned with “a handful of voters [who] will have trouble complying with the requirement.” In his response to the League of Women Voters’ lawsuit, Rokita discounted all critics, saying, “Indiana has got some real problems, and this isn’t one of them.”
He also trumpeted “eight successful elections in Indiana since the photo ID requirement was installed.”
Ten senior-citizen nuns don’t get to vote in the most exciting primary in Indiana in 40 years, and the secretary of state calls it “successful”?
The state chapter of the League is using Indiana’s constitution for its challenge. All that the state constitution requires is that a voter be 18, a U.S. citizen, registered and a resident of the state. Nothing short of a constitutional amendment can change that, the League contends.
In an official statement on the lawsuit, Rokita insisted he will “continue to stand strong in protecting Hoosier voters and taxpayers.” How ironic that he is standing against an organization that was founded in 1920 to aid America’s most recently enfranchised population, females, and which exists in all 50 states today to promote and protect voter participation.
Editorials
TRIBUNE-STAR EDITORIAL: A principled stand
League of Women Voters’ lawsuit on state voter ID law to be commended
- Editorials
-
-
EDITORIAL: Drug-testing bill lacks fairness and decency
The current session of the Indiana Legislature has produced plenty of initiatives that play well to the majority party’s base.
-
EDITORIAL: Keep religion out of science class
An uncertain fate remains for an Indiana Senate bill that would, if it were to become law, allow public schools to teach creationism and other origin-of-life theories in their classes. But this fight may have already been grounded.
-
EDITORIAL: Delivering on infrastructure
With national, state and local economies showing distinct signs of recovery from the Great Recession of 2008, it is good to hear Mayor Duke Bennett sounding optimistic about Terre Haute and its immediate future.
-
EDITORIAL: Volunteer ‘army’ serving the needs of children
You know, of course, that casa means house. But do you also know that its all-capitals cousin, CASA, means home?
-
EDITORIAL: Big dreams do come true
Consider this Super Bowl Sunday to be proof that anything is possible.
-
EDITORIAL: Big ‘kick’ from a native son
Every player in Sunday’s Super Bowl is from somewhere. But not every player remembers where he’s from and reaches out to consistently help those back home. Not like Steve Weatherford. Make that not like Terre Haute’s Steve Weatherford.
-
EDITORIAL: Smoking ban good enough
When it comes to getting things done in the Indiana General Assembly, progress is often measured in baby steps. Indeed, it can take years to achieve even meager accomplishments.
-
EDITORIAL: United Way’s strong reputation helps sustain community trust
It would be foolish in any community to take “positives” for granted, but it’s easy to understand how a casual observer would assume that United Way of the Wabash Valley will always come through with flying colors.
-
EDITORIAL: Nothing sexy about human trafficking
When kickoff comes at the 2012 Super Bowl, expectations will be high for a fun, competitive, fanatical contest between the two survivors of the NFL’s regular season.
-
EDITORIAL: The law’s good ‘Shepard’
Under the radar and against the backdrop of the fractious right-to-work battle going on in Indianapolis, one of state’s leading public servants delivered his valedictory in typical understated, even quiet, style two weeks ago. And before Indiana Supreme Court Chief Justice Randall T. Shepard slips away into retirement, his work needs to be acknowledged and praised.
-
EDITORIAL: Cops at risk
Indiana lawmakers are playing with a loaded gun in a bill that passed the Indiana Senate Monday, 45-5.
-
TRIBUNE-STAR EDITORIAL: Helping your community, a few mouse clicks at a time
When you type WabashValleyGives.org into your web browser, hundreds of opportunities to help your local community will open on the screen before you.
-
EDITORIAL: Raves around the town
To begin the week, we are raving about these recent pieces of local news:
-
EDITORIAL: Let Hoosiers have a say on right-to-work bill
Indiana legislators, both Republican and Democrat, may claim to know the will of the people on right-to-work.
-
EDITORIAL: Thin ice winter’s deadly scourge
Six-year-old Trevor Wayne Young of Nashville, Ind., and 50-year-old Allen D. Johnson of Galva, Ill., probably had little in common — except the way they died.
-
EDITORIAL: Meeting needs at St. Ann's
The caliber of a community often is revealed by its efforts to help its least fortunate citizens.
-
EDITORIAL: A sweet deal for Amazon.com
That loud lip-smack on the cheek you heard echoing from Indianapolis last week was the sound of Gov. Mitch Daniels kissing off on what amounts to another sweetheart deal between Indiana and Amazon.com, the online retailing giant.
-
EDITORIAL: A new era for growth
The promised announcement of a major new industry for the former Pfizer property in southern Vigo County turned out to be well worth the wait.
-
EDITORIAL: Transparency a worthy goal
Do taxpayers have the right to know specific details of contracts between elected school boards and superintendents they hire to run their operations?
-
EDITORIAL: Shakir Bell’s success gives boost to Sycamore football
Hope inspires progress. It’s the fuel for a better future.
-
EDITORIAL: Inspiration for the future
Hope inspires progress. It’s the fuel for a better future.
-
EDITORIAL: Put teeth in public access laws
Indiana’s laws governing public access, as good as they are, lack something important — teeth. There are no significant consequences for agencies or employees who intentionally violate them.
-
EDITORIAL: Time for teamwork in Sullivan
The beginning of a new mayoral term in any community is — or should be — a time when the talk of the town is rife with ideas, improvements and changes.
-
EDITORIAL: Lawmakers should leave IHSAA, high school basketball alone
In an idyllic world, Indiana could restore its fabled single-class high school basketball state tournament, and thousands of fans would pour into gymnasiums from Angola to Corydon in hopes of witnessing another “Milan Miracle” year after year after year.
-
EDITORIAL: ‘Anthem’ proposal way off key
Remember Faith Hill’s impassioned rendition of “The Star Spangled Banner” at the Super Bowl in 2000?
-
EDITORIAL: Back from the access brink
It took almost a week, but Gov. Daniels finally stepped up and did the right thing on Wednesday, rescinding new rules aimed at restricting the number of people allowed in the Statehouse during this session of the General Assembly.
-
EDITORIAL: Poor decision by local Dems
By a little after 4 this afternoon, Terre Haute Mayor Duke Bennett will have been sworn in for a second term and City Councilman-elect Robert All will have taken the oath of office for the first time.
-
EDITORIAL: Be it resolved …
Resolutions for 2012 are top-of-mind today.
-
EDITORIAL: Another slice of Classic history
Baseball is the so-called American pastime, but to Hoosiers and to our Illinois neighbors, it’s basketball that gets a community’s blood pumping. And no form of roundball does that any more intimately than high school basketball, whether boys or girls. College hoops is great, but nothing quite beats the packed, overheated confines of a high school gym when a tight game turns on every possession, every shot, every rebound, every pass, every defensive position. The sing-song of cheerleaders, the shrillness of a ref’s whistle, the squeak of gym shoes on hardwood, the shouted instructions from the benches, the aroma of popcorn — those form a Midwestern tableau unlike any other.
-
EDITORIAL: A strategy for growth
There are many ways to market an area in order to spur economic growth. Some may work better than others, but there is no perfect approach. The essential thing is to have a strategy and to implement it.
- More Editorials Headlines
-
EDITORIAL: Drug-testing bill lacks fairness and decency








