While Americans Whine about Iranian Elections, SC Weakens Voting Rights Act

blackascoal

The Force is With Me
Supreme Court Pulls Teeth From the Voting Rights Act

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.
http://www.thenation.com/blogs/thebeat/445246/supreme_court_pulls_teeth_from_the_voting_rights_act
 
African-Americans have been in this country for more than 400 years .. yet it is STILL necessary to maintain vigorous laws to ensure the rights of non-white Americans citizens.

Even in spite of these laws the disenfranchisement of non-white citizens continues to this day .. CONCLUSIVELY PROVEN, STUDIED, AND DOCUMENTED.

Yet America points its crooked finger towards Iran .. a country we REALLY showed how to fix an election.

signed,
The Mirror
 
But if there was only one dissenting Justice, and a conservative one at that, how could this be conservative activism?
It isn't. It's inherent in both sides of the system. I'm willing to bet that BAC can cite many examples on how a change of venue for voters can disenfranchise a vote.
 
BAC, I know this is bad, but saying that we can't worry about the Iranian elections because of this... it is essentially a red herring.

There's a better word for it than "red herring" .. it's called hypocrisy.

Let me repeat something for you brother ..

African-Americans have been in this country for more than 400 years .. yet it is STILL necessary to maintain vigorous laws to ensure the rights of non-white Americans citizens. Even in spite of these laws, the disenfranchisement of non-white citizens continues to this day .. CONCLUSIVELY PROVEN, STUDIED, AND DOCUMENTED.

I'd say that's abolut 400 years of hypocrisy in spite of the advances. After 400 years we're not supposed to be celebrating "advances" but real and true equality .. most especially in having the ability to simply excerise the most basic tenet of a democracy .. the right to vote.

The tendency in this country is to point to "it's better than it was" .. but no real effort at creating real integrity at the polls for all Americans.

This is also true of America's criminal injustice system. It is no secret that it is racially biased to the core .. CONCLUSIVELY PROVEN, STUDIED, AND DOCUMENTED. We incarcerate more of our population than ANY nation we point our fingers at. It's just business in America.

Let's all point fingers at the Iranians .. and ignore the failures and injustice in our own country.

After all, we're special.
 
Yes, there is a problem in History class with the History teacher's fairness so we shouldn't take the Math test. Illogical.

One can see that we have some work to do here and still understand that what is happening in Iran is historical and will have implications for our future.

People here are supporting the people who are trying desperately to take their nation from the grip of a theocratic dictatorship.
 
BAC, you just support Ahmajindad because of his anti-American rhetoric. Now, don't get me wrong, I'm all for anti-American rhetoric, but not from fascists. When you went on this site and praised that speech where he said there were no gays in Iran all the liberals just stopped posting. You should realize that the enemy of your enemy isn't your friend. If you went into Iran and spouted your views, you would be executed, and Ahmajindad would consider it a great justice.
 
BAC, you just support Ahmajindad because of his anti-American rhetoric. Now, don't get me wrong, I'm all for anti-American rhetoric, but not from fascists. When you went on this site and praised that speech where he said there were no gays in Iran all the liberals just stopped posting. You should realize that the enemy of your enemy isn't your friend. If you went into Iran and spouted your views, you would be executed, and Ahmajindad would consider it a great justice.

Where oh where in my post did you see anything remotely conscrued to suggest that I support Ahmajindad.

I support the Iranian people and their right to choose whatever government they want irrespective of whether it is pro or anti-American.

I did not praise his "no gays speech", I laughed at it and those upset by it.

I'm betting that I've been around longer than you have and I'm betting I can tell you a few things about "the enemy of my enemy" .. which does not apply in this case. Nor does "if I were in Iran" apply either. I'm not in Iran and I'm real comfortable with the Iranian people deciding their own destiny .. however, I am in America and I find it more intelligent to deal with the failures HERE before pointing fingers at others.

You may have a different take.
 
Where oh where in my post did you see anything remotely conscrued to suggest that I support Ahmajindad.

I support the Iranian people and their right to choose whatever government they want irrespective of whether it is pro or anti-American.

I did not praise his "no gays speech", I laughed at it and those upset by it.

I'm betting that I've been around longer than you have and I'm betting I can tell you a few things about "the enemy of my enemy" .. which does not apply in this case. Nor does "if I were in Iran" apply either. I'm not in Iran and I'm real comfortable with the Iranian people deciding their own destiny .. however, I am in America and I find it more intelligent to deal with the failures HERE before pointing fingers at others.

You may have a different take.

Red-herring, BAC. The human brain is capable of multi-tasking.
 
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