Los Angeles Times

Another test for voting rights

Arizona asks the Supreme Court to further weaken a key federal law.

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In a disastrous decision in 2013, the Supreme Court gutted an important piece of the landmark Voting Rights Act: a requiremen­t that states with a history of racial discrimina­tion get permission from the Department of Justice or a federal court before making any changes in voting procedures.

On Tuesday the court heard arguments in an Arizona case that involves another key part of the law’s prohibitio­ns against racial discrimina­tion. That would be Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which allows legal challenges to election procedures that result in “a denial or abridgemen­t of the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color.”

This time the court must not water down the law’s protection­s for voters of color.

At issue in this case are two restrictio­ns in Arizona election law. One requires that officials discard provisiona­l ballots cast by voters who showed up at the wrong precinct, even if the ballots include statewide or national offices where precincts are irrelevant. The other targets collection of mail ballots by third parties — so-called “ballot harvesting.” Arizona allows only certain people — such as family members and caregivers — to handle mail ballots.

The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals struck down both provisions, concluding plausibly that they had a discrimina­tory impact on minority voters in a state with a history of racial bias. Arizona appealed to the Supreme Court, insisting that the state had ensured that “all citizens have an equal opportunit­y to vote.”

At Tuesday’s argument, Arizona Atty. Gen. Mark Brnovich also suggested that the alleged disparate impact on minorities involved mere “statistica­l anomalies.” Justice Neil Gorsuch pithily noted that what Brnovich called “statistica­l anomalies” were what “the other side would call proof.”

Not all supporters of voting rights think the appeals court got this case right. But it’s about much more than two disputed Arizona rules; it gives the court the chance to declare how broadly courts faced with claims of voting discrimina­tion should interpret the “results test” of Section 2, which in the past arose mostly in redistrict­ing cases.

Michael Carvin, a lawyer representi­ng the Arizona Republican Party, argued that “Arizona has not denied anyone any voting opportunit­y of any kind.”

That’s far too narrow an approach, and it would be a travesty if the court adopted it. Courts must look not only at whether there is equal opportunit­y to vote on paper, but also at whether some practices have the real-world effect of disenfranc­hising minorities. And part of that inquiry is to look at both statistics and whether a state has a history of racial discrimina­tion.

Emboldened by former President Trump’s lies about a fraudulent election, Republican state legislator­s across the nation are proposing measures that would make it harder to vote. It’s imperative that Congress enact measures to rectify the harm caused by the Supreme Court’s 2013 decision and to protect against new state efforts to suppress turnout.

But the Supreme Court also must play its part. However it rules on Arizona’s election laws, it must make clear that Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act will protect minority voters from subtle as well as overt discrimina­tion.

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