Why We Still Need the Voting Rights Act
Brentin Mock on May 24, 2012 - 10:30 AM ET
Articles on the Voting Rights Act are being filed in the obituary section, even though the act is less than fifty years old. Last week, a US Court of Appeals decision ruled against Shelby County, Alabama, which challenged the constitutionality of VRAs Section 5. A three-judge panel ruled two to one that it was still constitutional, but the dissenting judge, Senior Circuit Judge Stephen F. Williams, asked some tough questions that will need to be resolved before the Supreme Court inevitably looks at it again (In 2009, SCOTUS punted on this issue, but expressed serious skepticism about Section 5s vitality.) ...
South Carolina and Texas are covered jurisdictions under Section 5, while Indiana, which has a worse voting record, is not. As Williams pointed out, none of those three states are among the top ten worst offenders on voting rights. So the coverage formula needs to be reconsidered, Williams concluded. The coverage formula of Section 5 is the ankle bracelet for Southern states and counties (and a few Northern counties) that have been placed on house arrest for repeated voting rights violations mostly throughout Americas Jim Crow era. States like Alabama, Texas and South Carolina want courts to take that ankle bracelet off.
While those states claim they are no longer running errands for Jim Crow, Section 5 is set up to ensure that they never go back to doing it. How Section 5 works is that if a covered state or county wants to make election law changes, it needs pre-clearance from the Department of Justice or federal courts. To earn pre-clearance, the covered jurisdiction must prove that the law change wont have the purpose
nor the effect, of racial discrimination. Thats important: Its not enough to say you dont intend to disenfranchise black or Latino voters; you must assure that racial disenfranchisement doesnt become an unintended consequence.
In short, Section 5 is a precautionary principle agent. It forces certain jurisdictions to thoroughly think through voting legislation before implementation by proving first that it wont harm, as opposed to allowing implementation first, and then dealing with any harm after its already been done. It prioritizes permission over forgiveness and recklessness, and yes, in some ways that limits some states and counties discretion, but our lesson learned from the twentieth century was that left to their own discretion, some states and counties will be reckless with voting rights and wont even ask for forgiveness ...
http://www.thenation.com/blog/168048/why-we-still-need-voting-rights-act