Rick Hasen, curator of the excellent Election Law blog, examines the mysterious disappearance of the "American Center for Voting Rights." The slight of hand is dazzling.

In support of [ACVR counsel Thor Hearne's] position that voter-ID laws did not unconstitutionally suppress the votes of poor and minority voters, Hearne cited the decision of the DoJ to approve the pre-clearance of Georgia's voter-ID law, and a law review article supporting such laws, written under the pseudonym Publius.

Hearne didn't reveal that the decision on Georgia was made by political appointees of the DoJ over the strong objections of career attorneys there who believed the law was indeed discriminatory. Nor did he explain that (as I discovered and blogged about a few years earlier) Publius was none other than Hans von Spakovsky, then serving as one of the political DoJ officials who approved the Georgia voter-ID law. (President Bush later gave von Spakovsky a recess appointment to the Federal Election Commission.)

Digby has more on von Spakovsky.

Elrod's picture

Hans von Spakovsky

Man, if I had that name I'd call myself Publius too.

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