Bruce Ackerman and Jennifer Nou have written this article for Slate. It begins: “Americans have long fought hard to protect the right to vote and a generation ago emphatically rejected the idea of paying for the ballot. As the civil rights revolution reached its peak, Congress and the states in 1964 enacted the 24th Amendment, forbidding any ‘poll-tax or other tax’ in federal elections. Yet, remarkably enough, this basic text went unmentioned by the Supreme Court when it upheld Indiana’s photo-ID law this week.” And it is not as though the Court was unaware of the 24th Amendment argument.