The Less Noticed Battles That May Decide the Presidential Election
State skirmishes over the right to vote could help determine the outcome of the November election. · Fortune

Insults and name-calling are grabbing the bulk of the attention as presidential contenders Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump commence open warfare to win the White House. But less-noticed battles over the right to vote in some states could help determine the outcome of the November election.

During this fall's presidential election, 17 states will have new voting restrictions in place for the first time. Stricter rules, ostensibly to weed out fraudulent voting, requiring voters to show specific types of identification have proliferated. But many are being challenged in courts and, recently, such efforts to limit access to the ballot box in Texas and Wisconsin have run into setbacks.

A stringent law adopted by the Texas legislature discriminates against minorities, a federal appeals court ruled earlier this month. The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered a lower-court judge to find a way to ease rule that had limited the required identification to vote to a passport or a state-issued driver's license or license to carry a concealed handgun.

On the heels of that decision, another federal judge rejected Wisconsin's strict voter identification requirements. Voters who lack photo identification now will be able to cast a ballot if they sign an affidavit attesting to their identity, according to the ruling on the state's 2011 law.

The two states are hardly outliers in their campaign to redefine voter eligibility. A confluence of political and judicial decisions have spurred states scattered around the country, but largely in the South, to adopt restrictive measures on grounds that voters in previous elections have misrepresented their eligibility.

"There has been a flood of new laws. It continues to be a real problem," said Jennifer Clark, an attorney with the Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law, a non-partisan civil liberties group. The center is participating in the challenge to the Texas voter ID law, arguing that the state's effort disproportionately affects minorities, who typically have less access to the required identification than others.

The effort to reconfigure ballot access gathered steam after President Obama, in 2008, became the first Democrat to carry North Carolina in more than three decades - as black and younger voters turned out to vote in larger numbers than expected. The state's Republican lawmakers moved to circumscribe access to the voting booth. The wave of voting restrictions was also spurred by a Supreme Court ruling that same year that upheld Indiana's requirement for would-be voters to present photo identification.