Close Menu
  • Business
  • Education
    • Science
  • HBCU
  • Music
  • Politics
  • Tech
Featured Stories

Snoop Dogg drops bold new visual off his latest album

April 20, 2026

Student fires gun inside Valley Forge High School cafeteria

April 20, 2026

Leinbach Park shooting leaves 2 dead after fight turns fatal

April 20, 2026
Load More
What's Hot

Snoop Dogg drops bold new visual off his latest album

April 20, 2026

Student fires gun inside Valley Forge High School cafeteria

April 20, 2026

Leinbach Park shooting leaves 2 dead after fight turns fatal

April 20, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Snoop Dogg drops bold new visual off his latest album
  • Student fires gun inside Valley Forge High School cafeteria
  • Leinbach Park shooting leaves 2 dead after fight turns fatal
  • Kanye West is losing his European tour one country at a time
  • Kim Kardashian seems very happy and Lewis Hamilton appears to be the reason why
  • Khloé Kardashian is the family rock who has quietly been doing it all alone
  • Parentification turns children into caregivers and the damage can last a lifetime
  • Obstructive sleep apnea in women looks nothing like what doctors expect
  • Culture
  • Money
  • World
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Black TimesBlack Times
Subscribe
Tuesday, April 21
  • Business
  • Education
    • Science
  • HBCU
  • Music
  • Politics
  • Tech
Black TimesBlack Times
Home»News

Voter ID law poses alarming threat to Black and Brown voters

Dorcas OnasaBy Dorcas OnasaApril 5, 2026Updated:April 5, 2026 News No Comments4 Mins Read
Florida, Governor DeSantis
Courtesy Of WFLA News Channel 8
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has signed legislation requiring proof of citizenship for voters, a move that has immediately drawn criticism from civil rights groups, election officials and legal advocates who warn the law could push eligible voters off the rolls particularly in Black and Brown communities that have historically faced the highest barriers to political participation.

The law, which makes Florida the third state this year to adopt a version of the SAVE Act following South Dakota and Utah, requires election officials to verify citizenship status after a voter registers. That process involves cross-checking voter registrations against state and federal records. If a voter’s citizenship cannot be confirmed, officials are required to reach out and request documentation a REAL ID, birth certificate or passport. Voters who do not provide acceptable proof face removal from the voter rolls.

Who bears the burden

Civil rights attorneys have been quick to flag the uneven weight the law is likely to place on specific populations. The American Civil Liberties Union, which has already filed a lawsuit challenging the legislation, has highlighted older Black voters as one group particularly vulnerable to its requirements. Many elderly voters especially those born in Southern states during an era of segregated hospitals and inconsistent record keeping may have limited or no access to birth certificates, through no fault of their own.

That concern sits within a broader statistical reality. A study by the Brennan Center found that roughly 21 million U.S. citizens currently lack immediate access to documents that prove their citizenship. That figure alone raises pointed questions about the practical effect of a law that treats documentation as a baseline requirement for staying on the voter rolls.

Racial profiling concerns take center stage

Beyond the documentation issue, critics have raised the question of how election officials will decide which registrations require additional scrutiny. The absence of a clear, objective standard opens the door to decisions that could be shaped consciously or not by a voter’s name, background or perceived ethnicity. For communities already navigating a political climate marked by heightened immigration enforcement, that uncertainty is not abstract. It carries a lived weight that shapes how people approach government institutions, including the act of voting itself.

Election officials sound the alarm

On the administrative side, the law is already creating logistical headaches. Wendy Sartory Link, the Palm Beach County Supervisor of Elections, has noted that her office will need to build out new systems and processes to handle citizenship verification infrastructure that does not yet exist. That includes updating computer systems, working through questions about how different forms of documentation will be evaluated and potentially bringing on additional staff to absorb the workload. The timeline and cost of those changes remain unclear.

A familiar pattern with a troubling track record

History offers a cautionary reference point. Kansas passed its own proof-of-citizenship voting law in 2011, and the results were striking in the wrong direction thousands of eligible voters were blocked from registering because they could not produce the required paperwork. A federal judge struck the law down in 2018, but not before years of documented harm to voter participation in the state.

The stakes for democracy

Florida’s law arrives as voting rights remain one of the most contested issues in American political life. Advocates say that the pattern of proof-of-citizenship legislation  framed consistently as a safeguard against fraud despite minimal evidence that noncitizen voting is a widespread problem  functions in practice as a mechanism for narrowing the electorate. The voices most likely to be lost are those that already face the steepest climb to the ballot box.

With the ACLU‘s legal challenge now underway, the law’s future is uncertain. But its passage has already renewed urgency around a question that has defined American democracy for generations: who, in the end, gets to be counted.

ACLU Black voters Florida voting laws proof of citizenship Ron DeSantis SAVE Act voter disenfranchisement voter ID law voter suppression voting rights
Dorcas Onasa

Keep Reading

Student fires gun inside Valley Forge High School cafeteria

Leinbach Park shooting leaves 2 dead after fight turns fatal

Elon Musk summoned to Paris over deeply troubling allegations tied to X

The tragic murder shaking Black women clergy

Tony Carruthers faces execution as evidence raises doubts

Iran reopens 6 airports amid ceasefire with the U.S.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Login
Notify of
guest
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Our Picks
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss

Snoop Dogg drops bold new visual off his latest album

Music April 20, 2026

Snoop Dogg is not slowing down. Just ten days after dropping his 22nd studio album, 10 Til’…

Student fires gun inside Valley Forge High School cafeteria

April 20, 2026

Leinbach Park shooting leaves 2 dead after fight turns fatal

April 20, 2026

Kanye West is losing his European tour one country at a time

April 20, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Editors Picks
Latest Posts

Subscribe to News

Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • Culture
  • Money
  • Sports
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

wpDiscuz