With Election Day only 53 days away -- and early voting meaning that the first votes will be cast even sooner -- here are some voting rights issues coming up around the South: * Florida continues controversial "no match, no vote" rule: The Miami Herald reports that Florida will resume a policy from last year that requires voters to present ID which matches how they're listed in the state election database. As the Herald reports: The result is that voters whose identification doesn't match with state files on Election Day will be given a provisional ballot and two days to prove their identity for their ballot to count. Voting rights activists, who had unsuccessfully challenged the constitutionality of the law, blasted the decision, saying it allows the state to rely on what they consider error-prone databases in the month before voter registration ends on Oct. 6. * Virginia primary problems highlighted in Senate hearing: As the AP reports : Keshia Anderson took her 7-year-old son along when she voted in Virginia's Democratic presidential primary. He got an eyeful, she recalled: scant parking, hundreds standing in line and news that there were no more Democratic ballots. Then came a vision straight out of the painful past: a separate line of whites flowing past hundreds of blacks to vote, Anderson said. So went hearings held by the Senate Judiciary Committee this week, calling on the Department of Justice to better monitor polling ...