Arab Times

Dems craft bill with eye on top court

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WASHINGTON, July 10, (AP): As congressio­nal Democrats gear up for another bruising legislativ­e push to expand voting rights, much of their attention has quietly focused on a small yet crucial voting bloc with the power to scuttle their plans: the nine Supreme Court justices.

Democrats face dim prospects for passing voting legislatio­n through a narrowly divided Congress, where an issue that once drew compromise has become an increasing­ly partisan flashpoint. But as they look to reinstate key parts of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, a landmark civil rights-era law diminished over the past decade by Supreme Court rulings, they have accepted the reality that any bill they pass probably will wind up in litigation — and ultimately back before the high court.

The task of building a more durable Voting Rights Act got harder when the high court’s conservati­ve majority on July 1 issued its second major ruling in eight years narrowing the law’s once robust power.

“What it feels like is a shifting of the goal posts,” said Damon Hewitt, the president and executive director of the left-leaning Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

Sparring in Congress for months has focused on a different Democratic bill overhaulin­g elections, known as the For the People Act, which Republican senators blocked from debate on the chamber’s floor last month.

Separately, however, Democrats have held a marathon series of low-key “field hearings” to prepare for votes on a second measure, the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancemen­t Act, which could come to the House floor for a vote in September. The bill would allow courts and the Department of Justice to once again police changes to voting rules in places with a history of electoral discrimina­tion against minorities, a practice the Supreme Court put on hold in 2013.

Democrats hope the hearings they have conducted with little fanfare will help build a legislativ­e record that could withstand a court challenge. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Friday that the process will document what he called “the disgracefu­l tactics that Republican-led state legislatur­es are using across the country to keep people from voting.”

That’s criticism that Republican­s reject, arguing that the courts and Democratic administra­tions have selectivel­y enforced the law in the past.

“It’s not a coincidenc­e that a decade of court cases were only focused on Republican states,” said Rep. Rodney Davis, an Illinois Republican who sits on a committee that conducted the field hearings.

Counteract

Pressure has built for months on congressio­nal Democrats to counteract a concerted state-level Republican push to enact new voting restrictio­ns, inspired by President Donald Trump’s false claims of a stolen 2020 election. But there is a new sense of urgency among many in the party’s activist base following the Supreme Court ruling in the case of Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee, which upheld two restrictiv­e Arizona laws and will limit the ability to challenge voting restrictio­ns in court.

“We cannot wait until October or November,” said Rep. Joyce Beatty, an Ohio Democrat who chairs the Congressio­nal Black Caucus.

While the specifics of the legislatio­n have not yet been released, it would develop a new formula for determinin­g which states and local government­s would be subject to a review process known as “preclearan­ce.” The court blocked the practice in 2013, reasoning that the formula used to determine which places are subjected to it was outdated and unfairly punitive. But the court also ruled that Congress could develop a new formula.

Though laws and rules already in place wouldn’t be subject to a retooled Voting Rights Act, future ones would.

“We want to get our work done, but it has to be datafocuse­d and defensible within the courts,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar, a California Democrat who serves on a committee that has held many of the hearings.

Yet serious questions remain about whether the Supreme Court, which has a new and expanded conservati­ve majority, would still be receptive to a new preclearan­ce formula.

There’s also been a major shift in the Republican Party. The Voting Rights Act enjoyed bipartisan support in Congress for decades. It was reauthoriz­ed five times with commanding majorities, the most recent in 2006. But the bipartisan support eroded dramatical­ly after the court’s first ruling, in 2013, in the case of Shelby County, Alabama, v. Holder.

“If you look at the sea change in the politics, it all stems from Shelby and the political opportunit­y that it offers,” Hewitt said.

Republican­s say vast strides have been made in ballot access since the civil rights era, which is when the law’s preclearan­ce formula was first establishe­d. The initial law targeted states and localities with low minority turnout and a history of using hurdles such as literacy tests and poll taxes to disenfranc­hise minority voters.

Such barriers are no longer used, and Republican­s point to a swell of minority turnout in the last election as proof that many conservati­ve-leaning states, particular­ly in the South, should not be subjected to preclearan­ce.

They also point blame at Democrats, who in 2019 rejected a bipartisan bill to reestablis­h preclearan­ce. Many Democrats instead favored their own measure, which would have eschewed the use of minority voter turnout data, a pillar of the original Voting Rights Act, while leaning heavily on looser standards, such as using the number of legal settlement­s and consent decrees issued in voting rights cases, to pull places into preclearan­ce.

 ?? (AP) ?? From left: Public Counsel Senior Staff Attorney Talia Inlender, Judge Mark C. Scarsi, U.S. Marine Corps Hector Ocegueda, Immigrants’ Rights Attorney Helen Boyer, and Deported Veterans Director Hector Barajas, after Judge Scarsi administer­ed the citizenshi­p oath to Ocegueda in a federal courtroom in Los Angeles Friday, July 9, 2021. Ocegueda was brought to the United States from Mexico by his parents and grew up in the Southern California city of Artesia. He served in the Marine Corps from 1987 to 1991 and spent four more years in the reserves before he was honorably discharged.
(AP) From left: Public Counsel Senior Staff Attorney Talia Inlender, Judge Mark C. Scarsi, U.S. Marine Corps Hector Ocegueda, Immigrants’ Rights Attorney Helen Boyer, and Deported Veterans Director Hector Barajas, after Judge Scarsi administer­ed the citizenshi­p oath to Ocegueda in a federal courtroom in Los Angeles Friday, July 9, 2021. Ocegueda was brought to the United States from Mexico by his parents and grew up in the Southern California city of Artesia. He served in the Marine Corps from 1987 to 1991 and spent four more years in the reserves before he was honorably discharged.

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