| The Strange Ironic Career of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, 1965-2007 |
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| Written by Prof. J. Morgan Kousser | |||
| Tuesday, 08 April 2008 | |||
In his Article, Professor Kousser takes the recent renewal of various provisions of the Voting Rights Act as an invitation to reflect on the history of Section 5 of this politically transformative legislation. Although the Voting Rights Act currently enjoys overwhelming popular and legislative support, the rushed renewal of expiring provisions of the Act in 2005 and 2006 became a political minefield where partisan interests sowed the dragon’s teeth of the Act’s demise even as they extended provisions of the Act by twenty-five years. The much-heralded renewal merely restored Section 5 of the Act to its “damaged pre-2000” state, and tactics were employed to all but invite the Supreme Court to declare the Act unconstitutional under the Court’s reinvigorated federalism concerns. By delving into the history of Section 5 of this Act, Professor Kousser reveals that the present confusions reflected in the “renewal saga” were not anomalous outcomes of unique circumstances but instead accurately reflect a history that is filled with irony and unintended consequences. This historical study illuminates the fragility of the Voting Rights Act and the ease with which political apathy and antagonistic judicial pronouncements can frustrate progress towards racial equality in voting and democratic representation.
The Voting Rights Act of 1965: Renewing the "renewal".
written by Patricia A. (D.) Jefferson, May 06, 2008 The idea of having to renew what I thought was my right as an American concerns me. Now the renewal process is no the solution thus far. What does the average citizen do to remedy the problem? Is their a long term solution? Along with renewing license tags, licenses, paying property taxes, add in everything that must be updated from daily to yearly, every three years, every 5 years, every time we've updated that thing it's time to update this thing. Should't our inalienable rights be permanent? Thank you for your forum. Have a wonderful day. |
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