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The Supreme Court's Unanimous Attack on the Voting Rights Act

Posted by John Nichols, TheNation.com at 10:00 AM on June 22, 2009.


In a ruling Monday, the Court gave state and local officials new flexibility to 'opt out' of a key part of the anti-discrimination law.
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Once an election is done, it is hard to undo.

That's true in Iran, and it's also true in the United States.

This is why it is important to get the rules by which elections are held right before elections are held.

For this reason, one of the essential components of the Voting Rights Act -- arguably its most powerful tool for combating discrimination and disenfranchisement -- has long been a requirement that officials get approval from the Department of Justice before they change the way in which elections are conducted.

Allow states, counties, municipalities or school districts in the 16 states that are wholly or partially with historic patterns of discrimination to opt out of the review, and they will be able to organize and hold elections that renew those patterns. That's why the requirement has been referred to by law professors as "one of the crown jewels of the civil rights movement."

Foes of the Voting Rights Act have long focused on weakening Section 5 of the act, the provision that requires election officials in the states covered by the act to obtain federal permission before making changes to voting procedures, moving polling-place locations, requiring so-called "citizenship checks" and redrawing voting district lines. They rightly argued that to do so would remove the teeth from the measure that has long been disdained by southerners pining for the days before what former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott referred to as "all the laws of Washington" changed the way things were done in Dixie.

On Monday, the Supreme Court tarnished the crown jewel, giving state and local officials new flexibility to "opt out" of the requirement that they obtain permission when changing election rules. The court ruling does not invalidate the Voting Rights Act -- as some had feared -- but it does undermine it.

The court, with only one justice (Clarence Thomas) in partial dissent, said that the Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No. 1 in Austin, Texas, can avoid the advance approval requirement.

The ruling is being interpreted as a signal all local jurisdictions in a Voting Rights Act state can at least apply for what is referred to as "a statutory bailout."

That was a reversal of a lower federal court that had preserved the Voting Rights Act as it was intended to operate.

That's a dangerous move, say civil rights supporters.

As Georgia Congressman John Lewis, who has watched the court's deliberations closely, says, "No one can deny the fact we've made progress. But that's not the question. That's not the issue. The issue is we need this tool to guard against the possibility of reverting back to our dark past."

Lewis is right. Invalidating the Voting Rights Act would be a shock to the body politic. But dismantling the measure tooth by tooth should still be recognized for what it is: a judicial assault on history, and on the future.

The Voting Rights Act is still on the books -- despite evidence from recent hearings that Chief Justice John Roberts and some of his conservative activist colleagues would like to do away with it. Voters can still sue under its provisions when they believe they are victims of discrimination. Unfortunately, notes Laughlin McDonald, who directs the ACLU's voting rights project, few plaintiffs will have the financial resources to pursue these complex cases.

So the high court has taken a big whack at the Voting Rights Act.

Now it falls to the Obama administration's Department of Justice -- which has sent good signals regarding its commitment to enforcing voting rights protections -- and the Congress to put the teeth back in the act.

Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont, has warned that any attempt by the court to strike down the Voting Rights Act "would be conservative activism pure and simple."

The same goes for pulling the act apart tooth by tooth.

Digg!

Tagged as: supreme court, voting rights act, john lewis, patrick leahy

John Nichols writes about politics for The Nation magazine as its Washington correspondent.


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Where's the Full Story?
Posted by: Xynyx on Jun 22, 2009 11:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why would they do this? Why doesn't this article mention the rationale that was provided for such a ruling?

I have my own opinions about it... but they ALL agreed on this? Let's hear it!

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» RE: Where's the Full Story? Posted by: JSquercia
voting rights
Posted by: biff777 on Jun 22, 2009 2:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After the 2000 presidential election nothing was done about the Florida votes. You know, Texas sending felony reports to Florida about 2006 felonies in during 2000. unprecedented.org

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IMPEACH EVERY REPUBLICAN ON THE SUPREME COURT. WE DON'T NEED THEM OR WANT
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Jun 23, 2009 7:58 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
them. The court is way radical right. We need loose from them. We do need elective confirmation. If the electorate doesn't like them they should go. The Bush decision in 2000 should be grounds enough to get rid of them.

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I can't say it any better
Posted by: godsbreath64 on Jun 24, 2009 3:01 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"... dismantling the measure tooth by tooth should still be recognized for what it is: a judicial assault on history, and on the future."

Thank you !!

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IT IS A SHAME THIS DREW SO LITTLE COMMENT. NOTICE HOW THE SEXUAL
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Jun 24, 2009 3:40 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
articles drew such a long thread. The right does understand how limiting certain catagories of voter will help them win elections. Florida should have proven it to the dubious. This is a really serious issue.

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Prejudiced Law
Posted by: Hodgkisl on Jun 25, 2009 10:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The law should be shut down entirely or be fixed so it covers all states. The federal government should not be setting different standards for different areas. If different standards are needed for different areas it should be left to local governments, not the fed.

This bias makes it more costly for certain areas of the country to manage their local affairs than others. This is punishing the taxpayers of those areas for their parents prejudice.

Make the law equal for all or not at all.

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Yup!
Posted by: bobtr900 on Jun 26, 2009 2:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Repubs and their Religious Right are at it again.

The Repubs have made it clear that they fully intend to do everything they can to reverse all of Pres. Johnson's Great Society civil rights and voter rights legislation. They have also been very clear about the fact that they intend to do everything possible to reverse FDR's New Deal and all related legislation.

All the Repubs, the Cons, Neocons, Theocons, Neo-Nazis and Neo-Confederates and all other white supremacist groups will be very happy to extend their rule of hate and take away our American Rule of Law, as Scalia has called for. He also advocates for the end of our American democracy.

Clearly, there are groups, even religions (Catholic and evangelical fundies) that hate democracy, the fact that people can vote and thus control their own destiny. Actually, some of these same groups and people are the very ones who sided with Hitler, the Nazis and the business fascists during WWII. That includes the Catholic Church(my religion) the Bush family and such businesses like IBM. These very same groups are doing the very same things now. That's why people are dying in Iraq.

Big Business and Big Religion are antagonized by democracy, it forces them to play by the rules, the peoples rules. They much prefer to make the rules as they choose. They fully intend to take away our right to choose, and thus to run our own country.

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The More Things Change The More They Stay The Same!!!!
Posted by: desidid on Jun 28, 2009 11:24 PM   
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nuff said.

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More evidence(stupidity) they are not a court of law as the building is addressed,
Posted by: godsbreath64 on Jul 21, 2009 8:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but rather supreme count of bi-partisan patty-cake. Behold the Party-State south of Canada ...

FOR DUMMIES.


They have, with the skill of a master, shit-canned rules mandating impartial review in favor of presumption-of-frivolity mechanics to pummel what is left of the rule of law. If the sun still rises, OUR fascism's only contemporary leverage remaining are these tragic jokes returning their SIGNITURE pessima fides to the constitution to which they are charged from.

It has long since been time to defrock the juridical oligarchy this latest count attempts to buttress. If you are governing in the otherwise constitutional society, you have an illicit caucus at your disposal.


The "Federalist" Society Study of Public Policy and Law(arguendo) is NOTHING but a gutter-pomp cult. They and their stratagem, by their own definition, are diametrically opposed to law-based jurisprudence.


The la costra nostra of the usual caucus, however putrid, should be expected. But the lack of of dissenting opine this decade has been EVEN MORE SHOCKING to the most marginalized conscience.

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