A no-lose fix for the Voting Rights Act

KingOrfeo

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Michael Lind writes in Salon:

Thursday, Jun 27, 2013 04:45 PM EDT

A no-lose fix for the Voting Rights Act
Make Section 4 -- and federal pre-clearance of changes in electoral laws -- apply to all 50 states

By Michael Lind


By striking down Section 4 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, and thereby gutting the act’s Section 5, the Supreme Court has presented defenders of voting rights in America with a challenge —and a historic opportunity. The challenge is the need to avert a new wave of state and local laws restricting voting rights in the aftermath of the Court’s decision. The opportunity is the chance that Congress now has to universalize Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act, to make it apply to all 50 states.

Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 imposed a special coverage formula on jurisdictions with particularly bad histories of racial discrimination in voting, including nine states—Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia—and dozens of county and municipal governments, including the Bronx, Brooklyn and Manhattan. Section 5 authorized the Justice Department to require “pre-clearance” of proposed changes in electoral laws in these jurisdictions. The pre-clearance requirement has been used in recent years to thwart attempts by the ethnocentric non-Hispanic White Right to engage in voter ID laws or redistricting plans that were evidently motivated by the desire to indirectly eliminate or dilute the votes of nonwhite citizens or poor citizens.

By striking down Section 4, the coverage formula, the Court gutted Section 5, the authorization of pre-clearance. Eliminating pre-clearance gives states whose legislatures are controlled by the bitter, desperate, demographically declining White Right a green light to try to enact voter restriction policies that are racially discriminatory in their effect and undoubtedly in their intent.

Is there anything that progressives, centrists and enlightened conservatives can do, to avert a new wave of voter restrictions at the state level, which, while racially neutral in appearance, have the intent and effect of reducing black and Latino electoral power, to the benefit of the ethnocentric White Right?

If I read the majority opinion written by Chief Justice John Roberts correctly, Congress could enact a version of Section 4 that could be approved even by this mostly reactionary Supreme Court. Roberts criticized the recent reauthorization of the VRA for not updating it:

Congress did not use the record it compiled to shape a coverage formula grounded in current conditions. It instead re-enacted a formula based on 40-year-old facts having no logical relationship to the present day.

Congress should accept the Court’s challenge and rewrite the Voting Rights Act to revive Section 5 pre-clearance by enacting a version of Section 4 that passes this Court’s newly announced test.

The option of trying to revive a modified version of the old Section 4 would probably fail. For one thing, it is not clear how any modified list of states, short of the whole, could satisfy this Supreme Court, with its solicitude for “state sovereignty” (a concept more at home in the Confederate Constitution than in the U.S. Constitution).

Another problem is that even progressive Democrats might shy away from a vote that stamped the label “racist” on Alaska or Texas, as opposed to, say, California or Wisconsin. In the past, most recently in 2006, members of Congress avoided gratuitously insulting nine states — and several New York City boroughs! — by voting to renew all or part of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. Any new legislation that sought to name particular states as particularly racist would undoubtedly die in Congress.

Fortunately, there is an alternative: Congress can rewrite Section 4 to make it apply to all 50 states in perpetuity, thereby reviving — and universalizing — Section 5’s federal pre-clearance of state and local electoral law changes.

The rationale for universal federal pre-clearance of changes in state and local electoral laws is independent of the legacy of anti-black racism in the U.S. as a whole and the South in particular. In any ethnically diverse democracy that is also a federal system, the national government needs to be able to restrain the power of ethnic groups, including those that are national minorities but local majorities, from manipulating the electoral laws in sub-national jurisdictions to create tyrannical “ethnocracies” like the older White South.

Today, non-Hispanic whites are a minority in California, Texas and other states. By the middle of the 21st century, non-Hispanic whites will be a minority in the U.S. population as a whole, according to some projections. Who knows? Maybe in the future the outnumbered non-Hispanic white group, or other minority communities, will need to be protected against unjust attempts to dilute their votes by new, post-white majorities that prove to be as ethnocentric and undemocratic as non-Hispanic whites frequently were when they enjoyed majority status.

In other words, the rationale for congressionally authorized federal pre-clearance of changes in electoral systems at the state and local level would be compelling, even if there had never been any history of racism in the U.S. at all. The mere prospect of potential state and local majority tyranny in the electoral arena is rationale enough for a universal, permanent pre-clearance policy by the federal government.

It might be objected that this policy would not prevent similar majority tyranny at the federal level. That is true, but it is not a persuasive argument against federal pre-clearance. For most of American history, the greatest threats to enfranchisement of various minorities have been at the state and local level. The few exceptions — for example, Northern states that refused to enforce the federal fugitive slave act — merely underline the rule.

The federal government repeatedly has been forced to use not only the law but also military force to restrain local majority tyranny, during the Civil War and Reconstruction and again during the civil rights revolution. Conversely, state and local majority tyranny have flourished only when tolerated by the national majority. In the United States, the national majority has always been, and likely always will be, a more reliable champion of civil rights and voting rights than local majorities.

Universalizing Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act, then, makes excellent sense on its merits. It would make for smart politics, too. Proposing to universalize Section 4 would be a no-lose proposition for progressives, centrists and non-racist conservatives.

If a law universalizing Section 4 were enacted, then the Northern and Western states would have nothing to fear — unless, of course, their state governments were trying to use devious methods to restrict or dilute the voting power of particular groups, like the disproportionately minority poor. But that is as it should be. Why should race-motivated voter ID laws or redistricting schemes to dilute minority voters by “packing” them in ghettoized electoral districts be subject to more federal scrutiny in the South than in the Midwest or West Coast or New England? The same level of federal scrutiny should be brought to bear everywhere in the United States.

If a law universalizing Section 4 were to die in Congress, it would almost certainly be killed by Republicans based in the former Confederacy. Their success in stopping universalization of Section 4 would be a Pyrrhic victory, further identifying the Republican Party in the national mind with the most benighted white reactionaries in the former homeland of slavery and segregation. This outcome would strengthen not only Democrats but also reformist Republicans making the case that their party must be freed from its Southern captivity.

The neo-Confederate opponents of such a proposed law could not complain that it imposed a double standard. After all, the new, universal Section 4, along with the revived pre-clearance system of Section 5, would apply to Massachusetts, New York and California, as well as to Texas, Mississippi and Alabama.

Would a universalized version of Section 4 be acceptable to this Supreme Court? Because all states would be treated equally, the argument that it treated some unfairly would be irrelevant. Opponents would have to argue that by permanently universalizing Sections 4 and 5 of the Voting Rights Act, Congress was exceeding its constitutional authority. That would be a hard argument to make, given the clear language of the 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified in 1870:

Section 1. The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.

Section 2. The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

If universal, perpetual federal pre-clearance of changes in electoral laws by all state and local governments, to make sure they do not disadvantage particular minorities, is not “appropriate legislation” for defending “the right of citizens of the United States to vote” under the 15th Amendment, it is hard to imagine what “appropriate legislation” would be.

Justice Roberts has stated that Congress can pass a new version of the Voting Rights Act that reflects “current conditions.” Congress should take him up on his offer and rewrite the Voting Rights Act to make it apply to all 50 states and all local governments, forever.
 
Typical, totalitarianism is always the solution to every problem. Let's put the fucking federal government fox in the chicken coop of the civil society. Fuck Lind.

It's perfectly fine when the FOX comes from the Bible!!!
 
Unfortunately, pre-clearance is the antithesis (that means "exact opposite", Byron) of the GOP's "Block The Vote" campaign. As such, it'll never happen.
 
Typical, totalitarianism is always the solution to every problem. Let's put the fucking federal government fox in the chicken coop of the civil society. Fuck Lind.

Federal standards for changes in state voting law != totalitarianism. != authoritarianism. != much of anything at all that might be characterized as oppressive.
 
The way things are going in a generation or two there wont be enough niggaz in America to fret about. Let God keep sorting them out.
 
It's when you weigh out the totality of federal controls that the federalism enshrined in the Constitution is all but diminished into insignificance.

Look around the world. With the arguable exception of Switzerland, you won't find things going too well, in any country that is decentralized to the degree the U.S. was before the New Deal. The U.S. Constitution was written before the Industrial Revolution; things are different now, that kind of decentralization does not work any more.
 
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"The neo-Confederate opponents of such a proposed law could not complain that it imposed a double standard. After all, the new, universal Section 4, along with the revived pre-clearance system of Section 5, would apply to Massachusetts, New York and California, as well as to Texas, Mississippi and Alabama."

Actually, parts of Massachusetts used to be covered by the Voting Rights Act. I think some of New York City still is. Those parts of Massachusetts and certain other covered areas in New England got out of the need for pre-clearance by ceasing to engage in the sorts of activities that made pre-clearance necessary in the first place.

So while Lind's idea is decent in theory, and might be the most politically do-able way to save the VRA, we shouldn't pretend all parts of the country are equally at fault when it comes to vote suppression--as the last 3 days have shown crystal-clear.
 
its horriable....to have to show ID after all, one needs ID to vote for the fucking union. show ID to drive a car. show ID when getting on a plan. show ID to cash a check.



how dare they ask to show ID when voting for a democrat. everyone should be allowed to vote 4 or 10 times for a dumbass democrat.


long live the entitlements

get in line for the obama death panel
 
Interesting, that having lived in one of those horrible, backward states for all of my life, voting on numerous occasions and having to show I'd each time....no one at the polling place, regardless of color, seemed to have a problem showing their ID.

Everything worked just fine and anyone who wanted to, could vote. Had to be legal, of course.
 
Interesting, that having lived in one of those horrible, backward states for all of my life, voting on numerous occasions and having to show I'd each time....no one at the polling place, regardless of color, seemed to have a problem showing their ID.

Everything worked just fine and anyone who wanted to, could vote. Had to be legal, of course.

Because, everyplace in America is like where you went to go vote.
 
Because, everyplace in America is like where you went to go vote.

Not saying it is. But voter ID can work...very easily...for those who are wanting an honest election.

If a honest election is not the goal, then any reason can be made to not have voter ID.
 
But neither are we anything, you know, exceptional.

At least not now that The Obama has taken charge of ruling over us. His pandering, apologetic tours around the world belittle the people of America. It's just to bad the people that worship him are to stupid and blinded by his bullshit to see what he is doing. Even you, as you wallow in your joy of a socialistic society, are blind to the fallacy of such a Utopian dream.
 
Interesting, that having lived in one of those horrible, backward states for all of my life, voting on numerous occasions and having to show I'd each time....no one at the polling place, regardless of color, seemed to have a problem showing their ID.

Everything worked just fine and anyone who wanted to, could vote. Had to be legal, of course.

Hey how bout a deal here: a national voting registry with ID card, and a national gun registry with ID card. Sound good?
 
Hey how bout a deal here: a national voting registry with ID card, and a national gun registry with ID card. Sound good?

Cross-indexed with each other and with all other records of your personal interactions with government at any level from birth to death, including scanned copies of your birth certificate, school records, driver's license application, voting registration, draft registration, passport application, local property tax bills, federal income tax returns, arrest records, all in a central digital file in Washington corresponding to your national ID number. Sound good?
 
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Michael Lind writes in Salon:

Thursday, Jun 27, 2013 04:45 PM EDT

A no-lose fix for the Voting Rights Act
Make Section 4 -- and federal pre-clearance of changes in electoral laws -- apply to all 50 states

By Michael Lind

What an incomprehensibly stupid and now (thanks to this week's earlier SCOTUS ruling) blatantly illegal idea. Lind should be "remanded" to a high school civics class in hopes of gleaning some idea of how our legal system is actually supposed to work.

Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 imposed a special coverage formula on jurisdictions with particularly bad histories of racial discrimination in voting, including nine states—Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia—and dozens of county and municipal governments, including the Bronx, Brooklyn and Manhattan. Section 5 authorized the Justice Department to require “pre-clearance” of proposed changes in electoral laws in these jurisdictions. The pre-clearance requirement has been used in recent years to thwart attempts by the ethnocentric non-Hispanic White Right to engage in voter ID laws or redistricting plans that were evidently motivated by the desire to indirectly eliminate or dilute the votes of nonwhite citizens or poor citizens.

By striking down Section 4, the coverage formula, the Court gutted Section 5, the authorization of pre-clearance. Eliminating pre-clearance gives states whose legislatures are controlled by the bitter, desperate, demographically declining White Right a green light to try to enact voter restriction policies that are racially discriminatory in their effect and undoubtedly in their intent.

If I read the majority opinion written by Chief Justice John Roberts correctly, Congress could enact a version of Section 4 that could be approved even by this mostly reactionary Supreme Court. Roberts criticized the recent reauthorization of the VRA for not updating it:

Congress did not use the record it compiled to shape a coverage formula grounded in current conditions. It instead re-enacted a formula based on 40-year-old facts having no logical relationship to the present day.

Congress should accept the Court’s challenge and rewrite the Voting Rights Act to revive Section 5 pre-clearance by enacting a version of Section 4 that passes this Court’s newly announced test.

Of course, Lind does NOT read Robert's opinion correctly.

There is no "newly announced test," and Lind's reference to it only underscores his complete ignorance of how Sec. 4 of the VRA worked. Sec. 4 consisted of two basic statements of fact that when found to be applicable to a State or any of its political subdivisions therefore served to JUSTIFY the extreme measures of "preclearance" set forth in Sec. 5. Those factual statements were:

  • The existence of any "test or device....for the purpose or with the effect of denying or abridging the right to vote on account of race or color."
  • AND "the Director of the Census determines that less than 50 percentum of the persons of voting age residing therein were registered on November 1, 1964, or that less than 50 percentum of such persons voted in the presidential election of November 1964."
It was these two conditions in combination which effectively identified those jurisdictions with "particularly bad histories" of racial discrimination and which therefore triggered the remedy of "preclearance" in Sec. 5. Lind focuses on Robert's criticism that the formula is "outdated" and proposes to rectify the problem by drafting new language which, of course, would be "current."

In so doing, he totally misses the whole issue of weight and severity and the proper ratio of these two factors with respect to the PATTERN of state-sponsored racism and the legislative remedy imposed by the VRA.

And just an OBTW, I'd love for Lind to visit any of the nine states fresh from the burden of preclearance and have him suggest to those legislatures that they are still "controlled by the bitter, desperate, demographically declining White Right" as they were in 1965.

The option of trying to revive a modified version of the old Section 4 would probably fail. For one thing, it is not clear how any modified list of states, short of the whole, could satisfy this Supreme Court, with its solicitude for “state sovereignty” (a concept more at home in the Confederate Constitution than in the U.S. Constitution).

Shows how much you know. The Confederate Constitution is practically a verbatim copy of the United States Constitution. Here is how both documents handled the issue of "state's rights."

U. S. Constitution, Amendment 10: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

Confederate Constitution, Article Six, Section 6 - State powers: "The powers not delegated to the Confederate States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States, respectively, or to the people thereof."

The rationale for universal federal pre-clearance of changes in state and local electoral laws is independent of the legacy of anti-black racism in the U.S. as a whole and the South in particular.

Which precisely illustrates the worthlessness of Lind's "solution." It bears no relationship in fact or fancy to the current "problem" of State discrimination with respect to minority voting rights. His purpose is nothing more than to revive Sec. 4 and Sec. 5 of the VRA despite the lack of literacy tests for over 40 years and normalized voter registration rates and participation at the polls over nearly the same length of time.

In other words, the rationale for congressionally authorized federal pre-clearance of changes in electoral systems at the state and local level would be compelling, even if there had never been any history of racism in the U.S. at all. The mere prospect of potential state and local majority tyranny in the electoral arena is rationale enough for a universal, permanent pre-clearance policy by the federal government.

WH?T THE FU?CK?!?!! Yeah, because when it comes to quashing WHITE RACISM, one can't call upon the heavy hand of government too early, huh?! What a dumbass.

The federal government repeatedly has been forced to use not only the law but also military force to restrain local majority tyranny, during the Civil War and Reconstruction and again during the civil rights revolution.

Jeeezus, aren't those photographs getting a little brown around the edges by now? No pun intended.

Universalizing Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act, then, makes excellent sense on its merits. It would make for smart politics, too. Proposing to universalize Section 4 would be a no-lose proposition for progressives, centrists and non-racist conservatives.

That's definitely me you're talking to, but no, I still think you're full of shit.

If a law universalizing Section 4 were to die in Congress, it would almost certainly be killed by Republicans based in the former Confederacy.

No, it would be vehemently opposed by every state which never had a history of discriminating against minority voting rights along with the nine other states which had been subjected to federal preclearance and gave up any dreams of sustaining the perpetuation of Jim Crow decades ago.

Would a universalized version of Section 4 be acceptable to this Supreme Court? Because all states would be treated equally, the argument that it treated some unfairly would be irrelevant.

You keep getting your legal rationale backwards. "Equality" as an objective desired under the law is not obtained by distributing "unfair" treatment in equal proportions. The nature of the treatment itself is ALWAYS relevant. If it wasn't, racist Southern states could have avoided these headaches simply by denying whites the right to vote and closing the polls altogether.

If universal, perpetual federal pre-clearance of changes in electoral laws by all state and local governments, to make sure they do not disadvantage particular minorities, is not “appropriate legislation” for defending “the right of citizens of the United States to vote” under the 15th Amendment, it is hard to imagine what “appropriate legislation” would be.

No, it isn't. It's extremely easy. It's well-stated in the other 17 sections of the Voting Rights Act which applied to the 41 states that did NOT meet the conditions of Sec. 4 and were therefore NOT subjected to pre-clearance under Sec. 5. You should read them sometime.


Yo, Orfeo! Would you mind telling me what in God's name you found in this mindless drivel of Michael Lind that was worth a C&P??
 
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