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Ruling not likely to settle voter ID question

Updated at 3:46 p.m.

Updated at 3:46 p.m.

Today's long-awaited ruling was most likely a pit stop - maybe just the first - on the road to settling, or scuttling, the state's controversial voter identification law.

Even before Commonwealth Court Judge Robert E. Simpson Jr. released his 70-page decision, lawyers on both sides of the case said it would almost certainly end up in a higher court.

After the ruling came out, plaintiffs said they would ask the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to review it.

"We are disappointed but will seek to appeal," said David Gersch, one of the lawyers. "At trial, we demonstrated that there are about a million registered voters who lack the ID necessary to vote under Pennsylvania's photo ID law."

That decision means another round of legal briefs and courtroom arguments. At the same time, advocates say other groups have been eyeing a parallel challenge in federal court.

Simpson's order denied a bid to block the state from implementing the law, which requires voters to show state-issued identification before casting ballots.

Opponents complained the new law could unfairly keep Pennsylvanians from the polls, particularly people who didn't have or couldn't get such IDs in time. Supporters say the law was necessary to prevent election fraud, and disputed its impact would be so far-reaching.

Nineteen states have toughened their voter identification laws in the past two years. Challenges are pending in more than a third, including in Wisconsin, South Carolina, Texas and Florida.

The Pennsylvania case ranks among the most watched because of its potential to impact the presidential race in a critical swing state. That's also a reason observers expect the state's high court to put the case on a fast track.

"Everybody involved here understands the stakes," said Seth Kreimer, a constitutional law professor at the University of Pennsylvania and consultant to the American Civil Liberties Union, one of the petitioners in the case.

A quirk of timing on the state Supreme Court could add another political subplot to the case.

With Justice Joan Orie Melvin suspended, the state's highest court has just six members, an even split of Democrats and Republicans. That party affiliation might be deemed irrelevant in many cases they hear, but the politics are baked too deeply into this one.

Republicans pushed the law through the legislature with a party-line vote, and House Majority Leader Mike Turzai (R., Allegheny) famously declared that the law would help GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney win the state. Democrats pounced on that, contending it proved the law was concocted purely for political reasons.

If the high court splits 3-3 on the issue, Simpson's ruling would remain intact and the law would stand. For the Supreme Court to settle the case, one justice will have to buck his or her party line.

Observers are particularly focused on the role Chief Justice Ronald Castille, a Republican, could play in the case.

Castille irked some Republicans when he delivered the majority opinion this year that threw out a plan by GOP lawmakers to redraw Pennsylvania's legislative map. His role in the voter ID case could burnish his party bona fides, or burn them.

"We already had one political test case, and he was the swing vote," said Terry Madonna, who directs the Center for Politics and Public Affairs at Franklin and Marshall College.

Despite its national ramifications, the state courts should be the final arbiter.

"Once the state constitution has been interpreted by the state courts, the federal courts have, one would think, no role to play," Kreimer said.

But the professor cautioned that nothing is guaranteed.

"People can presumably get creative," he said, referring to the legal battle that led Florida's disputed 2000 presidential election results to the U.S. Supreme Court.

What's more likely are federal lawsuits challenging the law as a violation of the federal Voting Rights Act.

During the trial before Simpson, opponents presented survey results arguing that the law disproportionately impacted Latino voters, who were less likely to have the valid state-issued identification needed to cast ballots. Advocates could take a similar tact to federal court, presenting the case as a civil rights matter.

"I would frankly be surprised if there are not (federal) lawsuits filed," Witold "Vic" Walczak, state legal director for ACLU, said before Simpson's decision came down.

Meanwhile, state officials are standing pat. The Department of State spent months training local elections officials on the changes required by the law, spokesman Ron Ruman said, and had no contingency plans in place.

"We don't necessarily have a plan A or plan B," Ruman said last week, "because there are too many possibilities."