Call & Times

Voter suppressio­n is our biggest civil rights issue

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Standing up to racism and intoleranc­e is a moral imperative, and those who do, like Heather Heyer, the young woman who died as she challenged the thugs in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, last Saturday, are champions of American principles. In an era when so many bedrock values are under attack, it's important to think strategica­lly and prioritize the ones worth fighting for.

An exemplar of such strategic thinking, Martin Luther King Jr., fought on multiple fronts but prioritize­d one in particular: voting rights. Today, as in the 1960s, that same fight makes sense. For in this new civil rights era, voting rights for broad swaths of Americans — minorities, the young and the old — are again imperiled and under attack.

Many Confederat­e statues, which memorializ­e a murderous act of treason on an epic scale in defense of an inhu- mane institutio­n, deserve to come down or at least be repurposed as museum pieces. Many were erected not just as historical remembranc­es but as retrograde political statements, mainly in the early 20th century as Jim Crow laws formally codified racism in the South, and in the 1950s and '60s as a thumb in the eye of the civil rights movement.

Yet even if all 1,500 Confederat­e symbols across the country were removed overnight by some sudden supernatur­al force, the pernicious crusade to roll back voting rights would continue apace, with voters of color suffering its effects disproport­ionately. Pushing back hard against those who would purge voter rolls, demand forms of voter ID that many Americans don't possess, and limit times and venues for voting — this should be a paramount cause for the Trump era.

In statehouse after statehouse where Republican­s hold majorities, the play- book is well establishe­d, and the tactics are becoming increasing­ly aggressive.

Donald Trump's voter fraud commission is at the vanguard of this crusade, and the fix is in. Its vice chairman, Kris Kobach, is the nation's most determined, litigious and resourcefu­l champion of voter suppressio­n. Under his tutelage, the commission is likely to recommend measures whose effect will be that new obstacles to voting would be taken up in state legislatur­es. Millions of voters are at risk of disenfranc­hisement from this effort, and the knock-on effects of such a mass act of disempower­ment are dizzying.

The events in Charlottes­ville and the president's apologia for the right-wing extremists there should mobilize anyone passionate about civil rights. There would be no better target for their energies than the clear and present danger to the most fundamenta­l right in any democracy: the vote.

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