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Restore protection­s of the Voting Rights Act

- By Los Angeles Times Editorial Board

Five years after the Supreme Court gutted a key provision of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, a new report from the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights has confirmed prediction­s that the ruling would hobble enforcemen­t of that landmark law.

In addition to prohibitin­g racial discrimina­tion in voting nationwide, the Voting Rights Act requires states and localities with a history of discrimina­tion — most of them in the South — to “pre-clear” changes in their election procedures with the U.S. Department of Justice or a federal court.

In its 2013 decision in Shelby County vs. Holder, however, the court declared unconstitu­tional the formula Congress had establishe­d to determine which states would have to submit to pre-clearance, effectivel­y shutting pre-clearance down. Writing for himself and four other conservati­ves, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said the formula was obsolete because “things have changed dramatical­ly” since the Voting Rights Act was first enacted in 1965.

It was a disastrous decision.

The term “judicial activism” is thrown around, but if a decision ever deserved it, Shelby County did.

The Constituti­on authorizes Congress to enforce the provisions of the 15th Amendment — which guarantees the right to vote without regard to “race, color, or previous condition of servitude” — by enacting “appropriat­e legislatio­n.” In 2006 Congress voted to extend the Voting Rights Act’s coverage formula for an additional 25 years in legislatio­n signed by President George W. Bush. Despite that, the court threw it out.

The Civil Rights Commission report, “An Assessment of Minority Voting Rights Access in the United States,” makes it clear why the court should have deferred to Congress’ judgment that extending the coverage formula would protect gains already made and prevent states from relapsing into discrimina­tory practices.

Within two hours of the decision, the report notes, Texas’ attorney general tweeted that the state would reinstitut­e a strict photo ID law, which had been previously struck down by a court during the pre-clearance process. The day after the ruling, North Carolina’s legislatur­e voted to make its voter ID law stricter, and eliminated or restricted rules that had made it easier for minorities to vote. The report notes that both states’ actions were ultimately found by courts to be acts of intentiona­l racial discrimina­tion, but only after years of litigation. It almost certainly wouldn’t have come to that if the old preclearan­ce formula had remained in place.

The report mentions other consequenc­es of ending pre-clearance, such as the fact neither the Justice Department nor voters any longer receive notice of changes in voting procedures. That shifts the burden of monitoring election changes to voting rights groups, and imposes a large burden on communitie­s, “who must now stretch limited resources to track changes themselves in the absence of government transparen­cy,” the report says.

In its Shelby County decision, the Supreme Court left open the possibilit­y that pre-clearance could resume if Congress legislated a new formula that more accurately reflected recent patterns of discrimina­tion.

Responding to that invitation, Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont has introduced the Voting Rights Advancemen­t Act, which would automatica­lly subject a state to pre-clearance if 15 or more voting-rights violations had occurred there over the last 25 years (or 10 violations if one was committed by the state government itself.)

The Civil Rights Commission would go even further. It proposes that Congress create “a streamline­d remedy” to review potentiall­y discrimina­tory changes in election procedures before they go into effect — even, the report suggests, “in jurisdicti­ons that do not have extensive histories of discrimina­tion.”

The obstacle to accomplish­ing these or any other reforms isn’t constituti­onal; it’s political.

In Congress, as in state legislatur­es, Republican­s have a vested interest in restrictio­ns — such as unnecessar­y requiremen­ts for photo ID at the polls — that disproport­ionately make voting harder for minorities who tend to support Democrats.

Unless Republican­s have a change of heart — or unless they lose control of Congress — it will be impossible to undo the damage caused by the Supreme Court.

Editorials are the opinion of the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board and written by one of its members or a designee. The Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Rosemary O’Hara, Andy Reid and Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson.

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