Current:Home > ScamsNorth Carolina judge won’t prevent use of university digital IDs for voting -SovereignWealth
North Carolina judge won’t prevent use of university digital IDs for voting
View
Date:2025-04-15 12:45:36
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A North Carolina trial judge refused on Thursday a Republican Party request that he block students and employees at the state’s flagship public university from being able to show a digital identification to comply with a largely new photo ID law.
Wake County Superior Court Judge Keith Gregory denied a temporary restraining order sought by the Republican National Committee and state GOP, according to an online court record posted after a hearing. The ruling can be appealed.
The groups sued last week to halt the use of the mobile UNC One Card at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as a qualifying ID, saying state law only allows the State Board of Elections to approve physical cards.
The mobile UNC One Card was approved Aug. 20 by the board’s Democratic majority, marking the first such ID posted from someone’s smartphone that the board has OK’d.
The Democratic National Committee and a UNC-Chapel Hill student group joined the board in court to oppose the restraining order. They said the board rightly determined that the digital ID met the security and photo requirements set in state law in which to qualify.
In legal briefs, they also said there was nothing in the law that prevented the approval of a nonphysical card. The DNC attorneys wrote that preventing its use could confuse or even disenfranchise up to 40,000 people who work or attend the school.
The mobile UNC One Card is now the default ID card issued on campus, although students and permanent employees can still obtain a physical card instead for a small fee. The school announced this week that it would create physical cards at no charge for students and staff who wish to use one as a physical voter ID.
Voters already can choose to provide photo IDs from several broad categories, including their driver’s license, passport and military IDs The board also has approved over 130 types of traditional student and employee IDs that it says qualifies voting purposes in 2024, including UNC-Chapel Hill’s physical ID card. Only UNC-Chapel Hill mobile ID credentials on Apple phones were approved by the board.
Republicans said in the lawsuit they were worried that the mobile ID’s approval “could allow hundreds or thousands of ineligible voters” to vote. They argued an electronic card was easier to alter and harder for a precinct worker to examine.
North Carolina is a presidential battleground state where statewide races are usually very close.
The ruling comes as potentially millions planning to vote in the fall elections haven’t had to show an ID under the state’s 2018 voter ID law. Legal challenges meant the mandate didn’t get carried out the first time until the low-turnout municipal elections in 2023.
While early in-person voting begins Oct. 17, the first absentee ballots requested are expected to be transmitted starting Friday to military and overseas voters, with ballots mailed to in-state registrants early next week. Absentee voters also must provide a copy of a qualifying ID with their completed ballot or fill out a form explaining why they don’t have one.
veryGood! (514)
Related
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Princess Kate seen in rare outing for church service in Scotland
- As NFL's ultimate kickoff X-factor, Cordarrelle Patterson could produce big returns for Steelers
- 'Is she OK?': Scotty McCreery stops show after seeing man hit woman in crowd
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Atlanta’s former chief financial officer gets 3 years in federal corruption probe
- Mariah Carey’s mother and sister died on the same day. The singer says her ‘heart is broken’
- Edwin Moses documentary to debut Sept. 21 at his alma mater, Morehouse College
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Football player dies of head injury received in practice at West Virginia middle school
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- New Hampshire resident dies after testing positive for mosquito-borne encephalitis virus
- Best Wayfair Labor Day Deals 2024 Worth Buying: Save 50% off Kitchen Essentials, 70% off Furniture & More
- Cooper Flagg, Duke freshman men's basketball phenom, joins New Balance on endorsement deal
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- RealPage lawyer denies collusion with landlords to raise rents, 'open to solutions' to resolve DOJ lawsuit
- Feds say Army soldier used AI to create child sex abuse images
- Salmon will soon swim freely in the Klamath River for first time in a century once dams are removed
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Judge says 4 independent and third-party candidates should be kept off Georgia presidential ballots
Oyster shell recycling program expands from New Orleans to Baton Rouge
How a Technology Similar to Fracking Can Store Renewable Energy Underground Without Lithium Batteries
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
Police in a suburban New York county have made their first arrest under a new law banning face masks
Baywatch’s Nicole Eggert Shares She's in a Grey Area Amid Breast Cancer Battle
Newsom’s hands-on approach to crime in California cities gains critics in Oakland