North Carolina Voting Rights Trial Could Expose Discrimination Monday in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, lawyers clashed in a federal courtroom battle expected to last for weeks and affect millions of voters. At the center of the case is the accusation by the U.S. Justice Department, along with several other groups, that the state of North Carolina knowingly sought to discourage and disparage minority voters when it eliminated several fairly recently enacted voting acts. Detailing the situation, NPR reports that: For decades in the state, black voter turnout lagged far behind white turnout. Then, in 2000, state lawmakers opened up an early voting period. In 2005, they said voters could cast ballots outside their assigned precinct. In 2007, they enabled same-day registration. After those changes, attorney Allison Riggs, representing the League of Women Voters, says - black voter registration and turnout surged. "They had their intended effect of evening the playing field in the state, and the Legislature yanked that away," she says. [Related: The Weekend Update: June 15th] A 2013 Supreme Court decision updated parts of the 1965 Voters Rights Act, particularly the part that gave the Department of Justice oversight over voting in areas that have historically discriminated based on race. Per a report, North Carolina's legislature subsequently passed several laws that restricted that surge in minority voter growth, including tightening photo identification requirements and restricting early voting and same-day registration. Another provision eliminated a program that allowed 16- and 17-year-olds to pre-register so they would be automatically registered to vote at 18. While the state maintains that the changes to the laws were necessary, former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, speaking with NPR, notes "It is especially troubling that the law would significantly narrow the early voting window that enabled hundreds of thousands of North Carolinians, including a disproportionately large number of minority voters, to cast ballots.†President Obama Takes Step To Reform Criminal Justice System Earlier this week, President Barack Obama commuted or reduced the sentences of 46 prisoners serving time for drug and drug related offenses. As part of an ongoing attempt to reform the nation's criminal justice system, President Obama said this was just one of many measures, which include reviewing sentencing laws and reducing punishments for non-violent crimes. In a copy of the letter posted by the White House on Monday, President Obama wrote to each of the newly commuted individuals - "I am granting your application because you have demonstrated the potential to turn your life around. Now it is up to you to make the most of this opportunity. It will not be easy, and you will confront many who doubt people with criminal records can change. Perhaps even you are unsure of how you will adjust to your new circumstances. But remember that you have the capacity to make good choices." In his video statement, President Obama said of the United States, "I believe that at its heart America is a nation of second chances, and I believe these folks deserve their second chance.†Continue reading on the next page... Also this week, the President announced plans to visit Oklahoma's El Reno correctional institution, becoming the first sitting president to visit a federal prison. Addressing attendees at the NAACP's National Convention in Philadelphia yesterday, President Obama touched on a few of the issues that he sees as plaguing the criminal justice and prison systems, including the pervasive privilege of race and wealth, as well as gang activity, rape, and overcrowding. "We should not tolerate conditions in prison that have no place in any civilized country… We should not be tolerating overcrowding in prison. We should not be tolerating gang activity in prison. We should not be tolerating rape in prison, and we shouldn't be making jokes about it in our popular culture,†Obama added. "That is no joke. These things are unacceptable.†Nuclear Agreement Reached With Iran Today President Obama addressed the media, responding to critics of the recent nuclear agreement reached between several of the world's superpowers, including the U.S., U.K., France, Russia, China, Germany, and Iran. Just one day after reaching the agreement, the president and the nuclear agreement have faced scrutiny from members of the press and, most notably, other Middle Eastern nations, as well as domestic lawmakers. In a report from the Wall Street Journal, they note that ‘critics in Washington, Israel and the Gulf nations that neighbor Iran say the deal will merely delay the country's path to nuclear weapons. After 10 years of restraint on its activities mandated by the agreement, Iran will then be able to ratchet up its nuclear program and potentially unleash a nuclear arms race in the region, they fear.' In his address today, President Obama offered that - "With this deal, we cut off every single one of Iran's pathways to a nuclear program, a nuclear weapons program… without a deal, those pathways remain open. There would be no limits to Iran's nuclear program, and Iran could move closer to a nuclear bomb.†The terms of the deal, which has been roughly a decade in the making, essentially state that Iran will restrain its nuclear development for 10 years - allowing for strict and rigorous oversight throughout and, in exchange, will benefit from the removal of economic sanctions placed on the nation by the U.S., E.U., and U.N. Recognizing that the deal is a stopgap in the pursuit of world peace, President Obama added to his message - â€We've got a historic chance to pursue a safer and more secure world,†he said, "an opportunity that may not come again in our lifetimes.â€