RALEIGH, North Carolina (WTVD) -- North Carolina's new Democratic governor and attorney general say they're ending state efforts to persuade the U.S. Supreme Court to revive a GOP-backed voter ID law that was struck down by a lower court, but Republican lawmakers say they will continue pushing for the high court's review.
Gov. Roy Cooper and Attorney General Josh Stein said Tuesday they're withdrawing from the state's petition for a high court review. The Supreme Court next must decide if it will take up the case anyway.
Last year Pat McCrory, then the state's Republican governor, asked the Supreme Court to review a lower appeals court ruling. The July opinion by the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals determined tougher ballot access rules adopted in 2013 were written with "almost surgical precision" to discourage black voters who tended to support Democrats.
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"We need to make it easier for people to exercise their right to vote, not harder, and I will not continue to waste time and money appealing this unconstitutional law," Cooper said in a prepared statement.
The law, passed two years after Republicans took control of the state legislature for the first time in a century, sought to entrench GOP politicians in power "by targeting voters who, based on race, were unlikely to vote for the majority party," the opinion by a three-judge panel of the court stated.
"We can only conclude that the North Carolina General Assembly enacted the challenged provisions of the law with discriminatory intent," the judges said.
The Supreme Court in August divided 4-4 on overturning the appeals court ruling for last fall's elections. That meant North Carolina's voter identification requirement couldn't be enforced and allowed an extra seven days of early voting and same-day voter registration.
The state's Republican legislative leaders decried Tuesday's effort by state Democrats.
"Roy Cooper's and Josh Stein's desperate and politically-motivated stunt to derail North Carolina's voter ID law is not only illegal, it also raises serious questions about whether they've allowed their own personal and political prejudices and conflicts of interest to cloud their professional judgment. We expect the courts to reject this unethical stunt just as they did when Cooper tried the same trick in the 'Choose Life' license tag case," Senate Leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, and House Speaker Tim Moore, R-Cleveland, said in a statement.
The state elections board also could opt to press the Supreme Court request, but the panel itself may be revamped as part of the ongoing partisan warfare between entrenched Republican legislative leaders and the newly elected Democratic governor. The elections board meets Wednesday.
McCrory and Republican legislative leaders said last year the law's voter ID provision, which came into effect during the 2016 primaries, improved the integrity of elections. Appeals court judges said the state provided no evidence of the kind of in-person voter fraud the ID mandate would address. The law was amended last year to include a method for people unable to get a photo ID to still vote.
North Carolina voters last November backed Republican Donald Trump for president, re-elected fellow Republican U.S. Sen. Richard Burr and expanded the number of statewide GOP office-holders.
"We applaud the wise decision of Gov. Roy Cooper and Attorney General Josh Stein to stop defending a bad law designed to make voting harder," said Bob Hall, executive director Democracy North Carolina, a self-described non-partisan but generally left-leaning voting rights organization. "The decision will save taxpayers millions of dollars and save millions of voters from needless cuts to early voting and the elimination of safety-net protections (like same-day registration) that improve the elections system for everyone."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.