Orlando Sentinel

Truth is, GOP cannot win without cheating

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Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith “joking” — or so her campaign calls it — about what a “great idea” it is to enact laws that “make it just a little more difficult” for “liberal folks” to vote.

Mississipp­i, of course, is where Andrew Goodman, Medgar Evers, Michael Schwerner, George Lee, Vernon Dahmer, James Chaney and Herbert Lee were murdered because some people thought it “a great idea” to make it “just a little more difficult” for them to vote.

Perhaps the senator will forgive those of us who remember that and thus, find it hard to appreciate her sparkling wit.

The Voting Rights Act once provided at least some protection against voter suppressio­n. But in 2013, the Supreme Court cut out its heart, a section that prevented places with a history of discrimina­tion from changing their voting laws without federal approval.

Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts justified the decision by noting how much progress has been made toward ensuring the right to vote since the Act was passed in 1965. In effect, he said that because the VRA worked, it was no longer needed. As Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg noted in her dissent, this was “like throwing away your umbrella in a rainstorm because you are not getting wet.”

In the absence of the Act, Republican­s are running riot over African-American and other people’s voting rights. This bacchanal of suppressio­n is terribly shortsight­ed, striking as it does at democracy’s vitals. Put simply: When the integrity and fairness of the vote can’t be trusted, neither can the legitimacy of any government that vote installs.

The GOP is playing with fire. The right to vote must be sacrosanct, the path to the ballot box free from artificial impediment­s designed to advantage one party over another. Congress must restore and strengthen the Voting Rights Act. Because Ginsburg was right about umbrellas.

And right now, we are getting soaked.

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