Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Suing to stop a bad Georgia law

-

Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland announced Friday that the Justice Department is suing Georgia over the state’s new “Election Integrity Act.” The lawsuit makes a powerful case that the measure, one of several enacted by Republican-controlled state legislatur­es around the country, violates Section 2 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. The attorney general’s activism is especially welcome given the stonewalli­ng of voting-rights legislatio­n by congressio­nal Republican­s.

The complaint filed in federal court in Atlanta challenges several provisions of Georgia’s law, including identifica­tion requiremen­ts for obtaining an absentee ballot, limitation­s on ballot drop boxes and the ban on providing food and water to people waiting in line to vote.

Assistant Atty. Gen. for Civil Rights Kristen Clarke maintained that the Georgia law was “adopted with a racially motivated purpose.” That’s a dramatic accusation, but the department’s complaint amply supports it. It recites the history of discrimina­tion against Black voters in Georgia and notes that the Legislatur­e acted with knowledge of the disproport­ionate effect the law’s provisions would have on “Black voters’ ability to participat­e in the political process on an equal basis with white voters.”

Section 2, which applies nationwide, traditiona­lly has been used to challenge district lines that dilute the political influence of minority voters. But that provision has acquired new importance in protecting the right to vote since 2013. That was the year the Supreme Court essentiall­y gutted another provision, Section 5, that requires jurisdicti­ons with a history of racial discrimina­tion to “pre-clear” changes in their election rules with the Justice Department or a federal court in Washington, D.C. (Before that decision, Georgia was subject to pre-clearance.)

It’s unclear how effective lawsuits filed under Section 2 will be in countering restrictiv­e election laws and regulation­s. The Supreme Court will rule soon on the use of Section 2 to challenge two features of elections in Arizona: a requiremen­t that officials discard provisiona­l ballots cast by voters who showed up at the wrong precinct, and a limitation on the collection of mail ballots by third parties (also known as ballot harvesting).

On the other hand, requiring states with a history of discrimina­tion to pre-clear changes in their

election laws proved a potent protection for voting rights before 2013, when the Supreme Court struck down as outdated the formula used to determine which jurisdicti­ons were subject to pre-clearance.

The pre-clearance system would be reinvigora­ted if Congress passed the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancemen­t Act, one of two election-related proposals being pressed by congressio­nal Democrats. The other is the For the People Act, which would among other provisions require states to offer 15 days of early voting and allow wide use of voting by mail. The For the People Act passed the House in March, but has stalled in the Republican-controlled Senate, where debate was blocked on Tuesday by a filibuster.

Garland’s commitment to aggressive­ly protect voting rights is in the best traditions of the Justice Department. He has promised to double the number of employees in the department’s Civil Rights Division charged with enforcing protection­s for the right to vote. But the department’s lawyers would find it far easier to protect voting rights if Congress fulfilled its part of the

bargain.

Garland’s commitment to protect voting rights is in the best traditions of the Justice Department.

 ?? Andrew Harnik AP ??
Andrew Harnik AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States