Current:Home > NewsNorth Carolina elections board OKs university ID on phones for voter access this fall -LegacyCapital
North Carolina elections board OKs university ID on phones for voter access this fall
View
Date:2025-04-15 22:31:00
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — The North Carolina elections board on Tuesday approved the first digital identification that can be used to meet state voter ID requirements, signing off on mobile credentials offered to students and employees at the state’s flagship public university.
The Democratic-controlled State Board of Elections voted 3-2 along party lines to approve the credentials. It declared that showing the Mobile UNC One Card generated by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was a way registered voters could meet the state’s relatively new photo voter ID mandate.
The voter ID law sets several categories of qualifying identifications, such as North Carolina driver’s licenses, U.S. passports and some free ID cards. The state board also accepts applications from public and private universities, local government entities and others that want their IDs to qualify. While the board has OK’d over 130 traditional student and employee IDs as qualifying for voting purposes in 2024, Tuesday’s vote marks the qualification of the first such ID posted from someone’s smartphone.
The state Republican Party later criticized the approval and suggested a possible legal challenge ahead. Minor adjustments to ballot access could affect outcomes in several anticipated close statewide races this fall in North Carolina.
State law doesn’t specifically define an “identification card.” A board attorney told board members it was her reading that there’s nothing in the law that specifically limits approval to printed cards.
UNC-Chapel Hill students and employees who use Apple phones can obtain a Mobile One Card or continue to use a physical One Card, which already had been approved as a qualifying card. One Cards can also be used to access buildings and parking and pay for food.
Board Chair Alan Hirsch, a Democrat, said trends in technology led him to approve a mobile ID, pointing out that airline passengers now show boarding passes from their smartphones.
“There’s certainly enough flexibility within the statute for us to approve a digital card as a card. I think that’s the way of the world,” Hirsch told colleagues during the online meeting. “I think everyone of a certain younger generation than we are lives by that.”
Republican members argued the the language of the voter ID law requires an actual card unless or until the General Assembly changes it. Approving a mobile ID when state board officials still say showing a photo of a hard ID card from a mobile device can’t be accepted during in-person voting is “confusing and inconsistent,” GOP board member Four Eggers said.
“This is a different process we’re doing here than simply giving my friend my football tickets when I download them from the website,” Eggers said.
The law says qualifying IDs must meet several photo and security requirements to be approved by the board. State Board Executive Director Karen Brinson Bell said other schools have unsuccessfully attempted to get similar mobile ID cards approved. UNC-Chapel Hill met all the standards, she said, particularly by having an expiration date on the ID credential.
In a post on X, the state Republican Party wrote the elections board “is playing more games with Election Integrity” by permitting a digital ID.
“Rest assured -- we won’t stand for it,” the state GOP wrote.
The current voter ID law was initially approved in late 2018 but didn’t get carried out until the 2023 municipal elections as legal challenges continued. A trial in a federal lawsuit challenging the photo ID law was completed in May, but a judge has yet to issue a decision.
Someone who can’t show a qualifying ID casts a provisional ballot and either fills out an exception form or provides an ID before ballot counts are complete.
People casting traditional absentee ballots also are asked to put a copy of an ID into their envelope. UNC-Chapel Hill voters can now insert a photocopy of the One Card displayed on their phones after Tuesday’s approval, board spokesperson Pat Gannon said.
The board on Tuesday also formally placed Cornel West on the state’s presidential ballots after a federal judge overturned the board’s recent decision not to recognize a political group that appeared to collect enough signatures to become an official state party.
The board had voted along party lines last month not to certify the Justice for All Party of North Carolina, with some board members questioning the methods by which signatures were obtained.
But U.S. District Judge Terrence Boyle wrote on Aug. 12 that the board went too far in throwing out the party petition entirely. The board unanimously agreed Tuesday to comply with Boyle’s order to declare Justice for All an official party and to accept West, a progressive activist and professor, as a ballot candidate.
veryGood! (822)
Related
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Flooding in Central Europe leaves 5 dead in Poland and 1 in Czech Republic
- Everything to Know About the 2024 Emmys' Biggest Winner Shogun
- Apple is launching new AI features. What do they mean for your privacy?
- Billy Bean was an LGBTQ advocate and one of baseball's great heroes
- Officials ban swimming after medical waste washes ashore in Maryland, Virginia and Delaware
- Child trapped between boulders for 9 hours rescued by firefighters in New Hampshire
- Ulta & Sephora Flash Sales: 50% Off Coola Setting Spray, Stila Eyeshadow, Osea Night Cream & $11.50 Deals
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- You need to start paying your student debt. No, really.
Ranking
- Former Milwaukee hotel workers charged with murder after video shows them holding down Black man
- Child trapped between boulders for 9 hours rescued by firefighters in New Hampshire
- Sofia Vergara's Stunning 2024 Emmys Look Included This $16 Beauty Product
- Emmys: What you didn't see on TV, including Jennifer Aniston's ticket troubles
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- 2024 Emmys: Why Fans Are Outraged Over The Bear Being Classified as a Comedy
- Dick Van Dyke, 98, Misses 2024 Emmys After Being Announced as a Presenter
- After mass shooting, bill would require Army to use state crisis laws to remove weapons
Recommendation
Boy who wandered away from his 5th birthday party found dead in canal, police say
Emmys 2024: See Sofía Vergara, Dylan Mulvaney and More at Star-Studded After-Parties
A New York woman is challenging Miss America, Miss World rules banning mothers from beauty pageants
Will same policies yield a different response from campus leaders at the University of California?
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
Five college football Week 3 overreactions: Georgia in trouble? Arch Manning the starter?
A state’s experience with grocery chain mergers spurs a fight to stop Albertsons’ deal with Kroger
Georgia keeps No. 1 spot ahead of Texas in NCAA Re-Rank 1-134 as Florida State tumbles