Updated at 10:23 a.m. Oct. 10 with state's response — A Cole County judge has rejected a sworn statement that Missouri voters who wanted to use non-photo forms of identification had to sign in order to vote.
But Richard Callahan’s ruling, issued Tuesday, says most of the identification requirement the Missouri Legislature created in 2016 “is within its constitutional prerogative under the Missouri Constitution."
READ: Judge Callahan’s photo ID ruling
The law, which took effect in June 2017, allows voters to present documents like utility bills or college IDs. But those voters then had to sign a statement that they “do not possess a form of personal identification approved for voting” — which Callahan called “contradictory and misleading.”
“The affidavit plainly requires the voter to swear that they do not possess a form of personal identification approved for voting while simultaneously presenting to the election authority a form of personal identification that is approved,” Callahan wrote Tuesday. Implying that a photo ID is required to vote, he said, “is an outright misstatement of law.”
Under the ruling, voters who show non-photo identification will not have to sign the affidavit as it’s currently written. The state, Callahan said, cannot produce any materials that say a photo ID is required to vote, and Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft must make it clear that voters can use other forms of ID.
But he did not throw out a third part of the law that governs voters who do not have any forms of ID.
Priorities USA, the politically progressive group that filed the lawsuit on behalf of two Missouri voters, called Callahan’s ruling “an important victory for voting rights.” Its attorneys had challenged the entire law’s constitutionality and painted it as a tool to keep thousands of Missouri residents from voting.
Ashcroft said in a statement Wednesday morning that the timing "is unduly creating mass confusion."
"Judge Callahan’s decision directs the STATE not to use the statement; however, local election authorities enforce the statement requirement and so it is not clear if they are bound by the judge’s decision," Ashcroft said, adding that his office is "working with the Attorney General’s office to seek a stay and appeal the decision."
READ: Missouri’s photo-ID voter law challenged in circuit court
Callahan’s decision has no impact on a separate case filed in 2017 by the ACLU of Missouri challenging the lack of funding for training and free IDs. Cole County judge Jon Beetum threw out that lawsuit in January — a state appeals panel will hear arguments on that ruling on Wednesday.
St. Louis Public Radio's Marshall Griffin contributed to this report. Follow Rachel on Twitter: @rlippmann