By Dave Warner                  PHILADELPHIA, Nov 2 (Reuters) - An appellate court judge in  Pennsylvania has refused to stop the state from advertising its  suspended voter identification law, a publicity campaign that  critics argued was misleading to voters.                  Commonwealth Court Judge Robert Simpson said in a ruling on  Thursday that the groups that asked for the advertising to be  halted "never offered credible proof" that the state's campaign  would be likely to cause disenfranchisement.                  Simpson, a Republican in a state that elects its judges,  ruled last month that Pennsylvania could not enforce its new  voter ID law for the Nov. 6 election.                  The state has continued to run ads that carry the slogan  "Show It" with the tagline "if you have it" in small print.                  The state American Civil Liberties Union and others who  oppose the campaign said it was misleading because voters do not  have to show identification at the polls next week.                  In his order on Thursday, Simpson called the advertising  "education efforts."                  The ACLU challenged the voter ID law itself, arguing that it  discriminates against minorities, who often favor Democratic  candidates. Supporters of the law, which was passed in March by  the state's Republican-led legislature without a single  Democratic vote, said it would prevent voter fraud.                  Thirty U.S. states have some form of voter ID laws that will  be in effect for the general election on Tuesday, according to  the National Conference of State Legislatures.     (Editing by Colleen Jenkins; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)
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