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Voting Rights Act of 1965

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 is a landmark piece of federal legislation in the United States that prohibits racial discrimination in voting.[7][8] It was signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson during the height of the civil rights movement on August 6, 1965, and Congress later amended the Act five times to expand its protections.[7] Designed to enforce the voting rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, the Act sought to secure the right to vote for racial minorities throughout the country, especially in the South. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the Act is considered to be the most effective piece of federal civil rights legislation ever enacted in the country.[9] It is also "one of the most far-reaching pieces of civil rights legislation in U.S. history."[10]

Voting Rights Act of 1965
Long titleAn Act to enforce the fifteenth amendment of the Constitution of the United States, and for other purposes.
Acronyms (colloquial)VRA
NicknamesVoting Rights Act
Enacted bythe 89th United States Congress
EffectiveAugust 6, 1965
Citations
Public law89-110
Statutes at Large79 Stat. 437
Codification
Titles amendedTitle 52—Voting and Elections
U.S.C. sections created
Legislative history
  • Introduced in the Senate as S. 1564h by Mike Mansfield (DMT) and Everett Dirksen (RIL) on March 17, 1965
  • Committee consideration by Judiciary
  • Passed the Senate on May 26, 1965 (77-19)
  • Passed the House with amendment on July 9, 1965 (333–85)
  • Reported by the joint conference committee on July 29, 1965; agreed to by the House on August 3, 1965 (328–74) and by the Senate on August 4, 1965 (79–18)
  • Signed into law by President Lyndon B. Johnson on August 6, 1965
Major amendments
  • Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1970[1]
  • Voting Rights Act of 1965, Amendments of 1975[2]
  • Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1982[3]
  • Voting Rights Language Assistance Act of 1992[4]
  • Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks, Coretta Scott King, César E. Chávez, Barbara C. Jordan, William C. Velásquez, and Dr. Hector P. Garcia Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and Amendments Act of 2006[5][6]
United States Supreme Court cases
List

The act contains numerous provisions that regulate elections. The act's "general provisions" provide nationwide protections for voting rights. Section 2 is a general provision that prohibits state and local government from imposing any voting rule that "results in the denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen to vote on account of race or color" or membership in a language minority group.[11] Other general provisions specifically outlaw literacy tests and similar devices that were historically used to disenfranchise racial minorities. The act also contains "special provisions" that apply to only certain jurisdictions. A core special provision is the Section 5 preclearance requirement, which prohibited certain jurisdictions from implementing any change affecting voting without first receiving confirmation from the U.S. attorney general or the U.S. District Court for D.C. that the change does not discriminate against protected minorities.[12] Another special provision requires jurisdictions containing significant language minority populations to provide bilingual ballots and other election materials.

Section 5 and most other special provisions applied to jurisdictions encompassed by the "coverage formula" prescribed in Section 4(b). The coverage formula was originally designed to encompass jurisdictions that engaged in egregious voting discrimination in 1965, and Congress updated the formula in 1970 and 1975. In Shelby County v. Holder (2013), the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the coverage formula as unconstitutional, reasoning that it was no longer responsive to current conditions.[13] The court did not strike down Section 5, but without a coverage formula, Section 5 is unenforceable.[14] The jurisdictions which had previously been covered by the coverage formula massively increased the rate of voter registration purges after the Shelby decision.[15]

In 2021, the Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee Supreme Court ruling reinterpreted Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, substantially weakening it.[16][11] The ruling interpreted the "totality of circumstances" language of Section 2 to mean that it does not generally prohibit voting rules that have disparate impact on the groups that it sought to protect, including a rule blocked under Section 5 before the Court inactivated that section in Shelby County v. Holder.[16][11] In particular, the ruling held that fears of election fraud could justify such rules, even without evidence that any such fraud had occurred in the past or that the new rule would make elections safer.[11]

Research shows that the Act had successfully and massively increased voter turnout and voter registrations, in particular among black people.[17][18][19] The Act has also been linked to concrete outcomes, such as greater public goods provision (such as public education) for areas with higher black population shares, and more members of Congress who vote for civil rights-related legislation.[20][21]

Background

As initially ratified, the United States Constitution granted each state complete discretion to determine voter qualifications for its residents.[22][23]: 50  After the Civil War, the three Reconstruction Amendments were ratified and limited this discretion. The Thirteenth Amendment (1865) prohibits slavery "except as a punishment for crime"; the Fourteenth Amendment (1868) grants citizenship to anyone "born or naturalized in the United States" and guarantees every person due process and equal protection rights; and the Fifteenth Amendment (1870) provides that "[t]he right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude." These Amendments also empower Congress to enforce their provisions through "appropriate legislation".[24]

To enforce the Reconstruction Amendments, Congress passed the Enforcement Acts in the 1870s. The acts criminalized the obstruction of a citizen's voting rights and provided for federal supervision of the electoral process, including voter registration.[25]: 310  However, in 1875 the Supreme Court struck down parts of the legislation as unconstitutional in United States v. Cruikshank and United States v. Reese.[26]: 97  After the Reconstruction Era ended in 1877, enforcement of these laws became erratic, and in 1894, Congress repealed most of their provisions.[25]: 310 

Southern states generally sought to disenfranchise racial minorities during and after Reconstruction. From 1868 to 1888, electoral fraud and violence throughout the South suppressed the African-American vote.[27] From 1888 to 1908, Southern states legalized disenfranchisement by enacting Jim Crow laws; they amended their constitutions and passed legislation to impose various voting restrictions, including literacy tests, poll taxes, property-ownership requirements, moral character tests, requirements that voter registration applicants interpret particular documents, and grandfather clauses that allowed otherwise-ineligible persons to vote if their grandfathers voted (which excluded many African Americans whose grandfathers had been slaves or otherwise ineligible).[25][27] During this period, the Supreme Court generally upheld efforts to discriminate against racial minorities. In Giles v. Harris (1903), the court held that regardless of the Fifteenth Amendment, the judiciary did not have the remedial power to force states to register racial minorities to vote.[26]: 100 

 
Alabama police in 1965 attack voting rights marchers on "Bloody Sunday", the first of the Selma to Montgomery marches

Prior to the enactment of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 there were several efforts to stop the disenfranchisement of black voters by Southern states,.[7] Besides the above-mentioned literacy tests and poll taxes other bureaucratic restrictions were used to deny them the right to vote. African Americans also "risked harassment, intimidation, economic reprisals, and physical violence when they tried to register or vote. As a result, very few African Americans were registered voters, and they had very little, if any, political power, either locally or nationally."[28] In the 1950s the Civil Rights Movement increased pressure on the federal government to protect the voting rights of racial minorities. In 1957, Congress passed the first civil rights legislation since Reconstruction: the Civil Rights Act of 1957. This legislation authorized the attorney general to sue for injunctive relief on behalf of persons whose Fifteenth Amendment rights were denied, created the Civil Rights Division within the Department of Justice to enforce civil rights through litigation, and created the Commission on Civil Rights to investigate voting rights deprivations. Further protections were enacted in the Civil Rights Act of 1960, which allowed federal courts to appoint referees to conduct voter registration in jurisdictions that engaged in voting discrimination against racial minorities.[9]

Although these acts helped empower courts to remedy violations of federal voting rights, strict legal standards made it difficult for the Department of Justice to successfully pursue litigation. For example, to win a discrimination lawsuit against a state that maintained a literacy test, the department needed to prove that the rejected voter-registration applications of racial minorities were comparable to the accepted applications of whites. This involved comparing thousands of applications in each of the state's counties in a process that could last months. The department's efforts were further hampered by resistance from local election officials, who would claim to have misplaced the voter registration records of racial minorities, remove registered racial minorities from the electoral rolls, and resign so that voter registration ceased. Moreover, the department often needed to appeal lawsuits several times before the judiciary provided relief because many federal district court judges opposed racial minority suffrage. Thus, between 1957 and 1964, the African-American voter registration rate in the South increased only marginally even though the department litigated 71 voting rights lawsuits.[26]: 514  Efforts to stop the disfranchisement by the Southern states had achieved only modest success overall and in some areas had proved almost entirely ineffectual, because the "Department of Justice's efforts to eliminate discriminatory election practices by litigation on a case-by-case basis had been unsuccessful in opening up the registration process; as soon as one discriminatory practice or procedure was proven to be unconstitutional and enjoined, a new one would be substituted in its place and litigation would have to commence anew."[7]

Congress responded to rampant discrimination against racial minorities in public accommodations and government services by passing the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The act included some voting rights protections; it required registrars to equally administer literacy tests in writing to each voter and to accept applications that contained minor errors, and it created a rebuttable presumption that persons with a sixth-grade education were sufficiently literate to vote.[23]: 97 [29][30] However, despite lobbying from civil rights leaders, the Act did not prohibit most forms of voting discrimination.[31]: 253  President Lyndon B. Johnson recognized this, and shortly after the 1964 elections in which Democrats gained overwhelming majorities in both chambers of Congress, he privately instructed Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach to draft "the goddamndest, toughest voting rights act that you can".[23]: 48–50  However, Johnson did not publicly push for the legislation at the time; his advisers warned him of political costs for vigorously pursuing a voting rights bill so soon after Congress had passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and Johnson was concerned that championing voting rights would endanger his Great Society reforms by angering Southern Democrats in Congress.[23]: 47–48, 50–52 

Following the 1964 elections, civil rights organizations such as the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) pushed for federal action to protect the voting rights of racial minorities.[31]: 254–255  Their efforts culminated in protests in Alabama, particularly in the city of Selma, where County Sheriff Jim Clark's police force violently resisted African-American voter registration efforts. Speaking about the voting rights push in Selma, James Forman of SNCC said: "Our strategy, as usual, was to force the U.S. government to intervene in case there were arrests—and if they did not intervene, that inaction would once again prove the government was not on our side and thus intensify the development of a mass consciousness among blacks. Our slogan for this drive was 'One Man, One Vote.'"[31]: 255 

In January 1965, Martin Luther King Jr., James Bevel,[32][33] and other civil rights leaders organized several peaceful demonstrations in Selma, which were violently attacked by police and white counter-protesters. Throughout January and February, these protests received national media coverage and drew attention to the issue of voting rights. King and other demonstrators were arrested during a march on February 1 for violating an anti-parade ordinance; this inspired similar marches in the following days, causing hundreds more to be arrested.[31]: 259–261  On February 4, civil rights leader Malcolm X gave a militant speech in Selma in which he said that many African Americans did not support King's nonviolent approach;[31]: 262  he later privately said that he wanted to frighten whites into supporting King.[23]: 69  The next day, King was released and a letter he wrote addressing voting rights, "Letter From A Selma Jail", appeared in The New York Times.[31]: 262 

With increasing national attention focused on Selma and voting rights, President Johnson reversed his decision to delay voting rights legislation. On February 6, he announced he would send a proposal to Congress.[23]: 69  Johnson did not reveal the proposal's content or disclose when it would come before Congress.[31]: 264 

On February 18 in Marion, Alabama, state troopers violently broke up a nighttime voting-rights march during which officer James Bonard Fowler shot and killed young African-American protester Jimmie Lee Jackson, who was unarmed and protecting his mother.[31]: 265 [34] Spurred by this event, and at the initiation of Bevel,[31]: 267 [32][33][35]: 81–86  on March 7 SCLC and SNCC began the first of the Selma to Montgomery marches, in which Selma residents intended to march to Alabama's capital, Montgomery, to highlight voting rights issues and present Governor George Wallace with their grievances. On the first march, demonstrators were stopped by state and county police on horseback at the Edmund Pettus Bridge near Selma. The police shot tear gas into the crowd and trampled protesters. Televised footage of the scene, which became known as "Bloody Sunday", generated outrage across the country.[26]: 515  A second march was held on March 9, which became known as "Turnaround Tuesday". That evening, three white Unitarian ministers who participated in the march were attacked on the street and beaten with clubs by four Ku Klux Klan members.[36] The worst injured was Reverend James Reeb from Boston, who died on Thursday, March 11.[37]

In the wake of the events in Selma, President Johnson, addressing a televised joint session of Congress on March 15, called on legislators to enact expansive voting rights legislation. He concluded his speech with the words "we shall overcome", a major anthem of the civil rights movement.[31]: 278 [38] The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was introduced in Congress two days later while civil rights leaders, now under the protection of federal troops, led a march of 25,000 people from Selma to Montgomery.[26]: 516 [31]: 279, 282 

Legislative history

 
United States President Lyndon B. Johnson, Martin Luther King Jr., and Rosa Parks at the signing of the Voting Rights Act on August 6, 1965

Efforts to eliminate discriminatory election practices by litigation on a case-by-case basis by the United States Department of Justice had been unsuccessful and existing federal anti-discrimination laws were not sufficient to overcome the resistance by state officials to enforcement of the 15th Amendment. Against this backdrop Congress came to the conclusion that a new comprehensive federal bill was necessary to break the grip of state disfranchisement.[7] The United States Supreme Court explained this in South Carolina v. Katzenbach (1966) with the following words:

In recent years, Congress has repeatedly tried to cope with the problem by facilitating case-by-case litigation against voting discrimination. The Civil Rights Act of 1957 authorized the Attorney General to seek injunctions against public and private interference with the right to vote on racial grounds. Perfecting amendments in the Civil Rights Act of 1960 permitted the joinder of States as parties defendant, gave the Attorney General access to local voting records, and authorized courts to register voters in areas of systematic discrimination. Title I of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 expedited the hearing of voting cases before three-judge courts and outlawed some of the tactics used to disqualify Negroes from voting in federal elections. Despite the earnest efforts of the Justice Department and of many federal judges, these new laws have done little to cure the problem of voting discrimination. [...] The previous legislation has proved ineffective for a number of reasons. Voting suits are unusually onerous to prepare, sometimes requiring as many as 6,000 man-hours spent combing through registration records in preparation for trial. Litigation has been exceedingly slow, in part because of the ample opportunities for delay afforded voting officials and others involved in the proceedings. Even when favorable decisions have finally been obtained, some of the States affected have merely switched to discriminatory devices not covered by the federal decrees, or have enacted difficult new tests designed to prolong the existing disparity between white and Negro registration. Alternatively, certain local officials have defied and evaded court orders or have simply closed their registration offices to freeze the voting rolls. The provision of the 1960 law authorizing registration by federal officers has had little impact on local maladministration, because of its procedural complexities.[39]

In South Carolina v. Katzenbach (1966) the Supreme Court also held that Congress had the power the pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965 under its Enforcement Powers stemming from the Fifteenth Amendment:

Congress exercised its authority under the Fifteenth Amendment in an inventive manner when it enacted the Voting Rights Act of 1965. First: the measure prescribes remedies for voting discrimination which go into effect without any need for prior adjudication. This was clearly a legitimate response to the problem, for which there is ample precedent under other constitutional provisions. See Katzenbach v. McClung, 379 U. S. 294, 379 U. S. 302–304; United States v. Darby, 312 U. S. 100, 312 U. S. 120–121. Congress had found that case-by-case litigation was inadequate to combat widespread and persistent discrimination in voting, because of the inordinate amount of time and energy required to overcome the obstructionist tactics invariably encountered in these lawsuits. After enduring nearly a century of systematic resistance to the Fifteenth Amendment, Congress might well decide to shift the advantage of time and inertia from the perpetrators of the evil to its victims. [...] Second: the Act intentionally confines these remedies to a small number of States and political subdivisions which, in most instances, were familiar to Congress by name. This, too, was a permissible method of dealing with the problem. Congress had learned that substantial voting discrimination presently occurs in certain sections of the country, and it knew no way of accurately forecasting whether the evil might spread elsewhere in the future. In acceptable legislative fashion, Congress chose to limit its attention to the geographic areas where immediate action seemed necessary. See McGowan v. Maryland, 366 U. S. 420, 366 U. S. 427; Salsburg v. Maryland, 346 U. S. 545, 346 U. S. 550–554. The doctrine of the equality of States, invoked by South Carolina, does not bar this approach, for that doctrine applies only to the terms upon which States are admitted to the Union, and not to the remedies for local evils which have subsequently appeared. See Coyle v. Smith, 221 U. S. 559, and cases cited therein.[40]

Original bill

Senate

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was introduced in Congress on March 17, 1965, as S. 1564, and it was jointly sponsored by Senate majority leader Mike Mansfield (D-MT) and Senate minority leader Everett Dirksen (R-IL), both of whom had worked with Attorney General Katzenbach to draft the bill's language.[41] Although Democrats held two-thirds of the seats in both chambers of Congress after the 1964 Senate elections,[23]: 49  Johnson worried that Southern Democrats would filibuster the legislation because they had opposed other civil rights efforts. He enlisted Dirksen to help gain Republican support. Dirksen did not originally intend to support voting rights legislation so soon after supporting the Civil Rights Act of 1964, but he expressed willingness to accept "revolutionary" legislation after learning about the police violence against marchers in Selma on Bloody Sunday.[23]: 95–96  Given Dirksen's key role in helping Katzenbach draft the legislation, it became known informally as the "Dirksenbach" bill.[23]: 96  After Mansfield and Dirksen introduced the bill, 64 additional senators agreed to cosponsor it,[23]: 150  with a total 46 Democratic and 20 Republican cosponsors.[42]

The bill contained several special provisions that targeted certain state and local governments: a "coverage formula" that determined which jurisdictions were subject to the Act's other special provisions ("covered jurisdictions"); a "preclearance" requirement that prohibited covered jurisdictions from implementing changes to their voting procedures without first receiving approval from the U.S. attorney general or the U.S. District Court for D.C. that the changes were not discriminatory; and the suspension of "tests or devices", such as literacy tests, in covered jurisdictions. The bill also authorized the assignment of federal examiners to register voters, and of federal observers to monitor elections, to covered jurisdictions that were found to have engaged in egregious discrimination. The bill set these special provisions to expire after five years.[25]: 319–320 [26]: 520, 524 [43]: 5–6 

The scope of the coverage formula was a matter of contentious congressional debate. The coverage formula reached a jurisdiction if (1) the jurisdiction maintained a "test or device" on November 1, 1964, and (2) less than 50 percent of the jurisdiction's voting-age residents either were registered to vote on November 1, 1964, or cast a ballot in the November 1964 presidential election.[25]: 317  This formula reached few jurisdictions outside the Deep South. To appease legislators who felt that the bill unfairly targeted Southern jurisdictions, the bill included a general prohibition on racial discrimination in voting that applied nationwide.[44]: 1352  The bill also included provisions allowing a covered jurisdiction to "bail out" of coverage by proving in federal court that it had not used a "test or device" for a discriminatory purpose or with a discriminatory effect during the 5 years preceding its bailout request.[43]: 6  Additionally, the bill included a "bail in" provision under which federal courts could subject discriminatory non-covered jurisdictions to remedies contained in the special provisions.[45][46]: 2006–2007 

The bill was first considered by the Senate Judiciary Committee, whose chair, Senator James Eastland (D-MS), opposed the legislation with several other Southern senators on the committee. To prevent the bill from dying in committee, Mansfield proposed a motion to require the Judiciary Committee to report the bill out of committee by April 9, which the Senate overwhelmingly passed by a vote of 67 to 13.[23]: 150 [42] During the committee's consideration of the bill, Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) led an effort to amend the bill to prohibit poll taxes. Although the Twenty-fourth Amendment—which banned the use of poll taxes in federal elections— was ratified a year earlier, Johnson's administration and the bill's sponsors did not include a provision in the voting rights bill banning poll taxes in state elections because they feared courts would strike down the legislation as unconstitutional.[26]: 521 [31]: 285  Additionally, by excluding poll taxes from the definition of "tests or devices", the coverage formula did not reach Texas or Arkansas, mitigating opposition from those two states' influential congressional delegations.[26]: 521  Nonetheless, with the support of liberal committee members, Kennedy's amendment to prohibit poll taxes passed by a 9–4 vote. In response, Dirksen offered an amendment that exempted from the coverage formula any state that had at least 60 percent of its eligible residents registered to vote or that had a voter turnout that surpassed the national average in the preceding presidential election. This amendment, which effectively exempted all states from coverage except Mississippi, passed during a committee meeting in which three liberal members were absent. Dirksen offered to drop the amendment if the poll tax ban were removed. Ultimately, the bill was reported out of committee on April 9 by a 12–4 vote without a recommendation.[23]: 152–153 

On April 22, the full Senate started debating the bill. Dirksen spoke first on the bill's behalf, saying that "legislation is needed if the unequivocal mandate of the Fifteenth Amendment ... is to be enforced and made effective, and if the Declaration of Independence is to be made truly meaningful."[23]: 154  Senator Strom Thurmond (R-SC) retorted that the bill would lead to "despotism and tyranny", and Senator Sam Ervin (D-NC) argued that the bill was unconstitutional because it deprived states of their right under Article I, Section 2 of the Constitution to establish voter qualifications and because the bill's special provisions targeted only certain jurisdictions. On May 6, Ervin offered an amendment to abolish the coverage formula's automatic trigger and instead allow federal judges to appoint federal examiners to administer voter registration. This amendment overwhelmingly failed, with 42 Democrats and 22 Republicans voting against it.[23]: 154–156  After lengthy debate, Ted Kennedy's amendment to prohibit poll taxes also failed 49–45 on May 11.[42] However, the Senate agreed to include a provision authorizing the attorney general to sue any jurisdiction, covered or non-covered, to challenge its use of poll taxes.[31]: 156–157 [43]: 2  An amendment offered by Senator Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY) to enfranchise English-illiterate citizens who had attained at least a sixth-grade education in a non-English-speaking school also passed by 48–19. Southern legislators offered a series of amendments to weaken the bill, all of which failed.[23]: 159 

On May 25, the Senate voted for cloture by a 70–30 vote, thus overcoming the threat of filibuster and limiting further debate on the bill.[47] On May 26, the Senate passed the bill by a 77–19 vote (Democrats 47–16, Republicans 30–2); only senators representing Southern states voted against it.[23]: 161 [48]

House of Representatives

Emanuel Celler (D-NY), Chair of the House Judiciary Committee, introduced the Voting Rights Act in the House of Representatives on March 19, 1965, as H.R. 6400.[42] The House Judiciary Committee was the first committee to consider the bill. The committee's ranking Republican, William McCulloch (R-OH), generally supported expanding voting rights, but he opposed both the poll tax ban and the coverage formula, and he led opposition to the bill in committee. The committee eventually approved the bill on May 12, but it did not file its committee report until June 1.[23]: 162  The bill included two amendments from subcommittee: a penalty for private persons who interfered with the right to vote and a prohibition of all poll taxes. The poll tax prohibition gained Speaker of the House John McCormack's support. The bill was next considered by the Rules Committee, whose chair, Howard W. Smith (D-VA), opposed the bill and delayed its consideration until June 24, when Celler initiated proceedings to have the bill discharged from committee.[42] Under pressure from the bill's proponents, Smith allowed the bill to be released a week later, and the full House started debating the bill on July 6.[23]: 163 

To defeat the Voting Rights Act, McCulloch introduced an alternative bill, H.R. 7896. It would have allowed the attorney general to appoint federal registrars after receiving 25 serious complaints of discrimination against a jurisdiction, and it would have imposed a nationwide ban on literacy tests for persons who could prove they attained a sixth-grade education. McCulloch's bill was co-sponsored by House minority leader Gerald Ford (R-MI) and supported by Southern Democrats as an alternative to the Voting Rights Act.[23]: 162–164  The Johnson administration viewed H.R. 7896 as a serious threat to passing the Voting Rights Act. However, support for H.R. 7896 dissipated after William M. Tuck (D-VA) publicly said he preferred H.R. 7896 because the Voting Rights Act would legitimately ensure that African Americans could vote. His statement alienated most supporters of H.R. 7896, and the bill failed on the House floor by a 171–248 vote on July 9.[49] Later that night, the House passed the Voting Rights Act by a 333–85 vote (Democrats 221–61, Republicans 112–24).[23]: 163–165 [42][50]

Conference committee

The chambers appointed a conference committee to resolve differences between the House and Senate versions of the bill. A major contention concerned the poll tax provisions; the Senate version allowed the attorney general to sue states that used poll taxes to discriminate, while the House version outright banned all poll taxes. Initially, the committee members were stalemated. To help broker a compromise, Attorney General Katzenbach drafted legislative language explicitly asserting that poll taxes were unconstitutional and instructed the Department of Justice to sue the states that maintained poll taxes. To assuage concerns of liberal committee members that this provision was not strong enough, Katzenbach enlisted the help of Martin Luther King Jr., who gave his support to the compromise. King's endorsement ended the stalemate, and on July 29, the conference committee reported its version out of committee.[23]: 166–167  The House approved this conference report version of the bill on August 3 by a 328–74 vote (Democrats 217–54, Republicans 111–20),[51] and the Senate passed it on August 4 by a 79–18 vote (Democrats 49–17, Republicans 30–1).[23]: 167 [52][53] On August 6, President Johnson signed the Act into law with King, Rosa Parks, John Lewis, and other civil rights leaders in attendance at the signing ceremony.[23]: 168 

Amendments

 
United States President George W. Bush signs amendments to the Act in July 2006

Congress enacted major amendments to the Act in 1970, 1975, 1982, 1992, and 2006. Each amendment coincided with an impending expiration of some or all of the Act's special provisions. Originally set to expire by 1970, Congress repeatedly reauthorized the special provisions in recognition of continuing voting discrimination.[23]: 209–210 [43]: 6–8  Congress extended the coverage formula and special provisions tied to it, such as the Section 5 preclearance requirement, for five years in 1970, seven years in 1975, and 25 years in both 1982 and 2006. In 1970 and 1975, Congress also expanded the reach of the coverage formula by supplementing it with new 1968 and 1972 trigger dates. Coverage was further enlarged in 1975 when Congress expanded the meaning of "tests or devices" to encompass any jurisdiction that provided English-only election information, such as ballots, if the jurisdiction had a single language minority group that constituted more than five percent of the jurisdiction's voting-age citizens. These expansions brought numerous jurisdictions into coverage, including many outside of the South.[54] To ease the burdens of the reauthorized special provisions, Congress liberalized the bailout procedure in 1982 by allowing jurisdictions to escape coverage by complying with the Act and affirmatively acting to expand minority political participation.[26]: 523 

In addition to reauthorizing the original special provisions and expanding coverage, Congress amended and added several other provisions to the Act. For instance, Congress expanded the original ban on "tests or devices" to apply nationwide in 1970, and in 1975, Congress made the ban permanent.[43]: 6–9  Separately, in 1975 Congress expanded the Act's scope to protect language minorities from voting discrimination. Congress defined "language minority" to mean "persons who are American Indian, Asian American, Alaskan Natives or of Spanish heritage."[55] Congress amended various provisions, such as the preclearance requirement and Section 2's general prohibition of discriminatory voting laws, to prohibit discrimination against language minorities.[56]: 199  Congress also enacted a bilingual election requirement in Section 203, which requires election officials in certain jurisdictions with large numbers of English-illiterate language minorities to provide ballots and voting information in the language of the language minority group. Originally set to expire after 10 years, Congress reauthorized Section 203 in 1982 for seven years, expanded and reauthorized it in 1992 for 15 years, and reauthorized it in 2006 for 25 years.[57]: 19–21, 25, 49  The bilingual election requirements have remained controversial, with proponents arguing that bilingual assistance is necessary to enable recently naturalized citizens to vote and opponents arguing that the bilingual election requirements constitute costly unfunded mandates.[57]: 26 

Several of the amendments responded to judicial rulings with which Congress disagreed. In 1982, Congress amended the Act to overturn the Supreme Court case Mobile v. Bolden (1980), which held that the general prohibition of voting discrimination prescribed in Section 2 prohibited only purposeful discrimination. Congress responded by expanding Section 2 to explicitly ban any voting practice that had a discriminatory effect, regardless of whether the practice was enacted or operated for a discriminatory purpose. The creation of this "results test" shifted the majority of vote dilution litigation brought under the Act from preclearance lawsuits to Section 2 lawsuits.[26]: 644–645  In 2006, Congress amended the Act to overturn two Supreme Court cases: Reno v. Bossier Parish School Board (2000),[58] which interpreted the Section 5 preclearance requirement to prohibit only voting changes that were enacted or maintained for a "retrogressive" discriminatory purpose instead of any discriminatory purpose, and Georgia v. Ashcroft (2003),[59] which established a broader test for determining whether a redistricting plan had an impermissible effect under Section 5 than assessing only whether a minority group could elect its preferred candidates.[60]: 207–208  Since the Supreme Court struck down the coverage formula as unconstitutional in Shelby County v. Holder (2013), several bills have been introduced in Congress to create a new coverage formula and amend various other provisions; none of these bills have passed.[61][62][63]

Provisions

 
The first page of the Voting Rights Act of 1965

The act contains two types of provisions: "general provisions", which apply nationwide, and "special provisions", which apply to only certain states and local governments.[64]: 1  "The Voting Rights Act was aimed at the subtle, as well as the obvious, state regulations which have the effect of denying citizens their right to vote because of their race. Moreover, compatible with the decisions of this Court, the Act gives a broad interpretation to the right to vote, recognizing that voting includes "all action necessary to make a vote effective." 79 Stat. 445, 42 U.S.C. § 19731(c)(1) (1969 ed., Supp. I). See Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533, 377 U. S. 555 (1964)."[65] Most provisions are designed to protect the voting rights of racial and language minorities. The term "language minority" means "persons who are American Indian, Asian American, Alaskan Natives or of Spanish heritage."[55] The act's provisions have been colored by numerous judicial interpretations and congressional amendments.

General provisions

General prohibition of discriminatory voting laws

Section 2 prohibits any jurisdiction from implementing a "voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or standard, practice, or procedure ... in a manner which results in a denial or abridgement of the right ... to vote on account of race," color, or language minority status.[57]: 37 [66] Section 2 of the law contains two separate protections against voter discrimination for laws which, in contrast to Section 5 of the law, are already implemented.[67][68] The first protection is a prohibition of intentional discrimination based on race or color in voting. The second protection is a prohibition of election practices that result in the denial or abridgment of the right to vote based on race or color.[67][68][69] If the violation of the second protection is intentional, then this violation is also a violation of the Fifteenth Amendment.[69] The Supreme Court has allowed private plaintiffs to sue to enforce these prohibitions.[70]: 138 [71] In Mobile v. Bolden (1980), the Supreme Court held that as originally enacted in 1965, Section 2 simply restated the Fifteenth Amendment and thus prohibited only those voting laws that were intentionally enacted or maintained for a discriminatory purpose.[72]: 60–61 [73][67][7][74] In 1982, Congress amended Section 2 to create a "results" test,[75] which prohibits any voting law that has a discriminatory effect irrespective of whether the law was intentionally enacted or maintained for a discriminatory purpose.[76][77]: 3 [67][7][74] The 1982 amendments stipulated that the results test does not guarantee protected minorities a right to proportional representation.[78] In Thornburg v. Gingles (1986) the United States Supreme Court explained with respect to the 1982 amendment for section 2 that the "essence of a Section 2 claim is that a certain electoral law, practice, or structure interacts with social and historical conditions to cause an inequality in the opportunities enjoyed by black and white voters to elect their preferred representatives."[79] The United States Department of Justice declared that section 2 is not only a permanent and nationwide-applying prohibition against discrimination in voting to any voting standard, practice, or procedure that results in the denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen to vote on account of race, color, or membership in a language minority group, but also a prohibition for state and local officials to adopt or maintain voting laws or procedures that purposefully discriminate on the basis of race, color, or membership in a language minority group.[79]

The United States Supreme Court expressed its views regarding Section 2 and its amendment from 1982 in Chisom v. Roemer (1991).[80] Under the amended statute, proof of intent is no longer required to prove a § 2 violation. Now plaintiffs can prevail under § 2 by demonstrating that a challenged election practice has resulted in the denial or abridgement of the right to vote based on color or race. Congress not only incorporated the results test in the paragraph that formerly constituted the entire § 2, but also designated that paragraph as subsection (a) and added a new subsection (b) to make clear that an application of the results test requires an inquiry into "the totality of the circumstances." Section 2(a) adopts a results test, thus providing that proof of discriminatory intent is no longer necessary to establish any violation of the section. Section 2(b) provides guidance about how the results test is to be applied.[81] There is a statutory framework to determine whether a jurisdiction's election law violates the general prohibition from Section 2 in its amended form:[82]

Section 2 prohibits voting practices that “result[] in a denial or abridgment of the right * * * to vote on account of race or color [or language-minority status],” and it states that such a result “is established” if a jurisdiction’s “political processes * * * are not equally open” to members of such a group “in that [they] have less opportunity * * * to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice.” 52 U.S.C. 10301. [...] Subsection (b) states in relevant part: A violation of subsection (a) is established if, based on the totality of circumstances, it is shown that the political processes leading to nomination or election in the State or political subdivision are not equally open to participation by members of a class of citizens protected by subsection (a) in that its members have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice.[83][84]

The Office of the Arizona Attorney general stated with respect to the framework to determine whether a jurisdiction's election law violates the general prohibition from Section 2 in its amended form and the reason for the adoption of Section 2 in its amended form:

To establish a violation of amended Section 2, the plaintiff must prove,“based on the totality of circumstances,” that the State’s “political processes” are “not equally open to participation by members” of a protected class, “in that its members have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice.” § 10301(b). That is the “result” that amended Section 2 prohibits: “less opportunity than other members of the electorate,” viewing the State’s “political processes” as a whole. The new language was crafted as a compromise designed to eliminate the need for direct evidence of discriminatory intent, which is often difficult to obtain, but without embracing an unqualified “disparate impact” test that would invalidate many legitimate voting procedures. S. REP. NO. 97–417, at 28–29, 31–32, 99 (1982)[85][84]

In Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee (2021) the United States Supreme Court introduced the means to review Section 2 challenges.[86][87] The slip opinion stated in its Syllabus section in this regard that "The Court declines in these cases to announce a test to govern all VRA [Section 2] challenges to rules that specify the time, place, or manner for casting ballots. It is sufficient for present purposes to identify certain guideposts that lead to the Court's decision in these cases."[88] The Court laid out these guideposts used to evaluate the state regulations in context of Section 2, which included: the size of the burden created by the rule, the degree which the rule deviates from past practices, the size of the racial imbalance, and the overall level of opportunity afforded voters in considering all election rules.[89][87]

When determining whether a jurisdiction's election law violates the general prohibition from Section 2 of the VRA, courts have relied on factors enumerated in the Senate Judiciary Committee report associated with the 1982 amendments ("Senate Factors"), including:[79]

  1. The history of official discrimination in the jurisdiction that affects the right to vote;
  2. The degree to which voting in the jurisdiction is racially polarized;
  3. The extent of the jurisdiction's use of majority vote requirements, unusually large electoral districts, prohibitions on bullet voting, and other devices that tend to enhance the opportunity for voting discrimination;
  4. Whether minority candidates are denied access to the jurisdiction's candidate slating processes, if any;
  5. The extent to which the jurisdiction's minorities are discriminated against in socioeconomic areas, such as education, employment, and health;
  6. Whether overt or subtle racial appeals in campaigns exist;
  7. The extent to which minority candidates have won elections;
  8. The degree that elected officials are unresponsive to the concerns of the minority group; and
  9. Whether the policy justification for the challenged law is tenuous.

The report indicates not all or a majority of these factors need to exist for an electoral device to result in discrimination, and it also indicates that this list is not exhaustive, allowing courts to consider additional evidence at their discretion.[73][78]: 344 [90]: 28–29 

No right is more precious in a free country than that of having a voice in the election of those who make the laws under which, as good citizens, we must live. Other rights, even the most basic, are illusory if the right to vote is undermined. Our Constitution leaves no room for classification of people in a way that unnecessarily abridges this right.

--Justice Black - on the right to vote as the foundation of democracy in Wesberry v. Sanders (1964).[91]

Section 2 prohibits two types of discrimination: "vote denial", in which a person is denied the opportunity to cast a ballot or to have their vote properly counted, and "vote dilution",[92][93]: 2–6  in which the strength or effectiveness of a person's vote is diminished.[94]: 691–692  Most Section 2 litigation has concerned vote dilution, especially claims that a jurisdiction's redistricting plan or use of at-large/multimember elections prevents minority voters from casting sufficient votes to elect their preferred candidates.[94]: 708–709  An at-large election can dilute the votes cast by minority voters by allowing a cohesive majority group to win every legislative seat in the jurisdiction.[95]: 221  Redistricting plans can be gerrymandered to dilute votes cast by minorities by "packing" high numbers of minority voters into a small number of districts or "cracking" minority groups by placing small numbers of minority voters into a large number of districts.[96]

In Thornburg v. Gingles (1986), the Supreme Court used the term "vote dilution through submergence" to describe claims that a jurisdiction's use of an at-large/multimember election system or gerrymandered redistricting plan diluted minority votes, and it established a legal framework for assessing such claims under Section 2.[a] Under the Gingles test, plaintiffs must show the existence of three preconditions:

  1. The racial or language minority group "is sufficiently numerous and compact to form a majority in a single-member district";
  2. The minority group is "politically cohesive" (meaning its members tend to vote similarly); and
  3. The "majority votes sufficiently as a bloc to enable it ... usually to defeat the minority's preferred candidate."[98]: 50–51 

The first precondition is known as the "compactness" requirement and concerns whether a majority-minority district can be created. The second and third preconditions are collectively known as the "racially polarized voting" or "racial bloc voting" requirement, and they concern whether the voting patterns of the different racial groups are different from each other. If a plaintiff proves these preconditions exist, then the plaintiff must additionally show, using the remaining Senate Factors and other evidence, that under the "totality of the circumstances", the jurisdiction's redistricting plan or use of at-large or multimember elections diminishes the ability of the minority group to elect candidates of its choice.[78]: 344–345 

Subsequent litigation further defined the contours of these "vote dilution through submergence" claims. In Bartlett v. Strickland (2009),[99] the Supreme Court held that the first Gingles precondition can be satisfied only if a district can be drawn in which the minority group comprises a majority of voting-age citizens. This means that plaintiffs cannot succeed on a submergence claim in jurisdictions where the size of the minority group, despite not being large enough to comprise a majority in a district, is large enough for its members to elect their preferred candidates with the help of "crossover" votes from some members of the majority group.[100][101]: A2  In contrast, the Supreme Court has not addressed whether different protected minority groups can be aggregated to satisfy the Gingles preconditions as a coalition, and lower courts have split on the issue.[b]

The Supreme Court provided additional guidance on the "totality of the circumstances" test in Johnson v. De Grandy (1994).[97] The court emphasized that the existence of the three Gingles preconditions may be insufficient to prove liability for vote dilution through submergence if other factors weigh against such a determination, especially in lawsuits challenging redistricting plans. In particular, the court held that even where the three Gingles preconditions are satisfied, a jurisdiction is unlikely to be liable for vote dilution if its redistricting plan contains a number of majority-minority districts that is proportional to the minority group's population size. The decision thus clarified that Section 2 does not require jurisdictions to maximize the number of majority-minority districts.[107] The opinion also distinguished the proportionality of majority-minority districts, which allows minorities to have a proportional opportunity to elect their candidates of choice, from the proportionality of election results, which Section 2 explicitly does not guarantee to minorities.[97]: 1013–1014 

An issue regarding the third Gingles precondition remains unresolved. In Gingles, the Supreme Court split as to whether plaintiffs must prove that the majority racial group votes as a bloc specifically because its members are motivated to vote based on racial considerations and not other considerations that may overlap with race, such as party affiliation. A plurality of justices said that requiring such proof would violate Congress's intent to make Section 2 a "results" test, but Justice White maintained that the proof was necessary to show that an electoral scheme results in racial discrimination.[108]: 555–557  Since Gingles, lower courts have split on the issue.[c]

The right to vote freely for the candidate of one's choice is of the essence of a democratic society, and any restrictions on that right strike at the heart of representative government. And the right of suffrage can be denied by a debasement or dilution of the weight of a citizen's vote just as effectively as by wholly prohibiting the free exercise of the franchise. [...] Undoubtedly, the right of suffrage is a fundamental matter in a free and democratic society. Especially since the right to exercise the franchise in a free and unimpaired manner is preservative of other basic civil and political rights, any alleged infringement of the right of citizens to vote must be carefully and meticulously scrutinized.

Chief Justice Earl Warren on the right to vote as the foundation of democracy in Reynolds v. Sims (1964).[112]

Although most Section 2 litigation has involved claims of vote dilution through submergence,[94]: 708–709  courts also have addressed other types of vote dilution under this provision. In Holder v. Hall (1994),[113] the Supreme Court held that claims that minority votes are diluted by the small size of a governing body, such as a one-person county commission, may not be brought under Section 2. A plurality of the court reasoned that no uniform, non-dilutive "benchmark" size for a governing body exists, making relief under Section 2 impossible.[114] Another type of vote dilution may result from a jurisdiction's requirement that a candidate be elected by a majority vote. A majority-vote requirement may cause a minority group's candidate of choice, who would have won the election with a simple plurality of votes, to lose after a majority of voters unite behind another candidate in a runoff election. The Supreme Court has not addressed whether such claims may be brought under Section 2, and lower courts have reached different conclusions on the issue.[d]

In addition to claims of vote dilution, courts have considered vote denial claims brought under Section 2. The Supreme Court, in Richardson v. Ramirez (1974),[117] held that felony disenfranchisement laws cannot violate Section 2 because, among other reasons, Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment permits such laws.[26]: 756–757  A federal district court in Mississippi held that a "dual registration" system that requires a person to register to vote separately for state elections and local elections may violate Section 2 if the system has a racially disparate impact in light of the Senate Factors.[26]: 754 [118] Starting in 2013, lower federal courts began to consider various challenges to voter ID laws brought under Section 2.[119]

Specific prohibitions

The act contains several specific prohibitions on conduct that may interfere with a person's ability to cast an effective vote. One of these prohibitions is prescribed in Section 201, which prohibits any jurisdiction from requiring a person to comply with any "test or device" to register to vote or cast a ballot. The term "test or device" is defined as literacy tests, educational or knowledge requirements, proof of good moral character, and requirements that a person be vouched for when voting.[120] Before the Act's enactment, these devices were the primary tools used by jurisdictions to prevent racial minorities from voting.[121] Originally, the Act suspended tests or devices temporarily in jurisdictions covered by the Section 4(b) coverage formula, but Congress subsequently expanded the prohibition to the entire country and made it permanent.[43]: 6–9  Relatedly, Section 202 prohibits jurisdictions from imposing any "durational residency requirement" that requires persons to have lived in the jurisdiction for more than 30 days before being eligible to vote in a presidential election.[122]: 353 

Several further protections for voters are contained in Section 11. Section 11(a) prohibits any person acting under color of law from refusing or failing to allow a qualified person to vote or to count a qualified voter's ballot. Similarly, Section 11(b) prohibits any person from intimidating, harassing, or coercing another person for voting or attempting to vote.[57] Two provisions in Section 11 address voter fraud: Section 11(c) prohibits people from knowingly submitting a false voter registration application to vote in a federal election, and Section 11(e) prohibits voting twice in a federal election.[123][124]: 360 

Finally, under Section 208, a jurisdiction may not prevent anyone who is English-illiterate or has a disability from being accompanied into the ballot box by an assistant of the person's choice. The only exceptions are that the assistant may not be an agent of the person's employer or union.[56]: 221 

Bail-in

Section 3(c) contains a "bail-in" or "pocket trigger" process by which jurisdictions that fall outside the coverage formula of Section 4(b) may become subject to preclearance. Under this provision, if a jurisdiction has racially discriminated against voters in violation of the Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendments, a court may order the jurisdiction to have future changes to its election laws preapproved by the federal government.[46]: 2006–2007  Because courts have interpreted the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to prohibit only intentional discrimination, a court may bail in a jurisdiction only if the plaintiff proves that the jurisdiction enacted or operated a voting practice to purposely discriminate.[46]: 2009 

Section 3(c) contains its own preclearance language and differs from Section 5 preclearance in several ways. Unlike Section 5 preclearance, which applies to a covered jurisdiction until such time as the jurisdiction may bail out of coverage under Section 4(a), bailed-in jurisdictions remain subject to preclearance for as long as the court orders. Moreover, the court may require the jurisdiction to preclear only particular types of voting changes. For example, the bail-in of New Mexico in 1984 applied for 10 years and required preclearance of only redistricting plans. This differs from Section 5 preclearance, which requires a covered jurisdiction to preclear all of its voting changes.[46]: 2009–2010 [125]

During the Act's early history, Section 3(c) was little used; no jurisdictions were bailed in until 1975. Between 1975 and 2013, 18 jurisdictions were bailed in, including 16 local governments and the states of Arkansas and New Mexico.[126]: 1a–2a  Although the Supreme Court held the Section 4(b) coverage formula unconstitutional in Shelby County v. Holder (2013), it did not hold Section 3(c) unconstitutional. Therefore, jurisdictions may continue to be bailed-in and subjected to Section 3(c) preclearance.[13][127] In the months following Shelby County, courts began to consider requests by the attorney general and other plaintiffs to bail in the states of Texas and North Carolina,[128] and in January 2014 a federal court bailed in Evergreen, Alabama.[129]

A more narrow bail-in process pertaining to federal observer certification is prescribed in Section 3(a). Under this provision, a federal court may certify a non-covered jurisdiction to receive federal observers if the court determines that the jurisdiction violated the voting rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendments. Jurisdictions certified to receive federal observers under Section 3(a) are not subject to preclearance.[130]: 236–237 

Special provisions

Coverage formula

 
States and counties encompassed by the Act's coverage formula in January 2008 (excluding bailed-out jurisdictions). Several counties subsequently bailed out,[54] but the majority of the map accurately depicts covered jurisdictions before the Supreme Court's decision in Shelby County v. Holder (2013), which declared the coverage formula unconstitutional.

Section 4(b) contains a "coverage formula" that determines which states and local governments may be subjected to the Act's other special provisions (except for the Section 203(c) bilingual election requirements, which fall under a different formula). Congress intended for the coverage formula to encompass the most pervasively discriminatory jurisdictions. A jurisdiction is covered by the formula if:

  1. As of November 1, 1964, 1968, or 1972, the jurisdiction used a "test or device" to restrict the opportunity to register and vote; and
  2. Less than half of the jurisdiction's eligible citizens were registered to vote on November 1, 1964, 1968, or 1972; or less than half of eligible citizens voted in the presidential election of November 1964, 1968, or 1972.

As originally enacted, the coverage formula contained only November 1964 triggering dates; subsequent revisions to the law supplemented it with the additional triggering dates of November 1968 and November 1972, which brought more jurisdictions into coverage.[54] For purposes of the coverage formula, the term "test or device" includes the same four devices prohibited nationally by Section 201—literacy tests, educational or knowledge requirements, proof of good moral character, and requirements that a person be vouched for when voting—and one further device defined in Section 4(f)(3): in jurisdictions where more than five percent of the citizen voting age population are members of a single language minority group, any practice or requirement by which registration or election materials are provided only in English. The types of jurisdictions that the coverage formula applies to include states and "political subdivisions" of states.[56]: 207–208  Section 14(c)(2) defines "political subdivision" to mean any county, parish, or "other subdivision of a State which conducts registration for voting."[131]

As Congress added new triggering dates to the coverage formula, new jurisdictions were brought into coverage. The 1965 coverage formula included the whole of Alabama, Alaska, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Virginia; and some subdivisions (mostly counties) in Arizona, Hawaii, Idaho, and North Carolina.[54] The 1968 coverage resulted in the partial coverage of Alaska, Arizona, California, Connecticut, Idaho, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, and Wyoming. Connecticut, Idaho, Maine, Massachusetts, and Wyoming filed successful "bailout" lawsuits, as also provided by section 4.[54] The 1972 coverage covered the whole of Alaska, Arizona, and Texas, and parts of California, Florida, Michigan, New York, North Carolina, and South Dakota.[54]

The special provisions of the Act were initially due to expire in 1970, and Congress renewed them for another five years. In 1975, the Act's special provisions were extended for another seven years. In 1982, the coverage formula was extended again, this time for 25 years, but no changes were made to the coverage formula, and in 2006, the coverage formula was again extended for 25 years.[54]

Throughout its history, the coverage formula remained controversial because it singled out certain jurisdictions for scrutiny, most of which were in the Deep South. In Shelby County v. Holder (2013), the Supreme Court declared the coverage formula unconstitutional because the criteria used were outdated and thus violated principles of equal state sovereignty and federalism.[13][132][133] The other special provisions that are dependent on the coverage formula, such as the Section 5 preclearance requirement, remain valid law. However, without a valid coverage formula, these provisions are unenforceable.[14][134]

Preclearance requirement

Section 5[135] requires that covered jurisdictions receive federal approval, known as "preclearance", before implementing changes to their election laws. A covered jurisdiction has the burden of proving that the change does not have the purpose or effect of discriminating on the basis of race or language minority status; if the jurisdiction fails to meet this burden, the federal government will deny preclearance and the jurisdiction's change will not go into effect. The Supreme Court broadly interpreted Section 5's scope in Allen v. State Board of Election (1969),[136] holding that any change in a jurisdiction's voting practices, even if minor, must be submitted for preclearance.[137] The court also held that if a jurisdiction fails to have its voting change precleared, private plaintiffs may sue the jurisdiction in the plaintiff's local district court before a three-judge panel.[e] In these Section 5 "enforcement actions", a court considers whether the jurisdiction made a covered voting change, and if so, whether the change had been precleared. If the jurisdiction improperly failed to obtain preclearance, the court will order the jurisdiction to obtain preclearance before implementing the change. However, the court may not consider the merits of whether the change should be approved.[12][70]: 128–129 [136]: 556 [139]: 23 

Jurisdictions may seek preclearance through either an "administrative preclearance" process or a "judicial preclearance" process. If a jurisdiction seeks administrative preclearance, the attorney general will consider whether the proposed change has a discriminatory purpose or effect. After the jurisdiction submits the proposed change, the attorney general has 60 days to interpose an objection to it. The 60-day period may be extended an additional 60 days if the jurisdiction later submits additional information. If the attorney general interposes an objection, then the change is not precleared and may not be implemented.[140]: 90–92  The attorney general's decision is not subject to judicial review,[141] but if the attorney general interposes an objection, the jurisdiction may independently seek judicial preclearance, and the court may disregard the attorney general's objection at its discretion.[26]: 559  If a jurisdiction seeks judicial preclearance, it must file a declaratory judgment action against the attorney general in the U.S. District Court for D.C. A three-judge panel will consider whether the voting change has a discriminatory purpose or effect, and the losing party may appeal directly to the Supreme Court.[142] Private parties may intervene in judicial preclearance lawsuits.[59]: 476–477 [140]: 90 

In several cases, the Supreme Court has addressed the meaning of "discriminatory effect" and "discriminatory purpose" for Section 5 purposes. In Beer v. United States (1976),[143] the court held that for a voting change to have a prohibited discriminatory effect, it must result in "retrogression" (backsliding). Under this standard, a voting change that causes discrimination, but does not result in more discrimination than before the change was made, cannot be denied preclearance for having a discriminatory effect.[144]: 283–284  For example, replacing a poll tax with an equally expensive voter registration fee is not a "retrogressive" change because it causes equal discrimination, not more.[145]: 695  Relying on the Senate report for the Act, the court reasoned that the retrogression standard was the correct interpretation of the term "discriminatory effect" because Section 5's purpose is " 'to insure that [the gains thus far achieved in minority political participation] shall not be destroyed through new [discriminatory] procedures' ".[143]: 140–141  The retrogression standard applies irrespective of whether the voting change allegedly causes vote denial or vote dilution.[144]: 311 

In 2003, the Supreme Court held in Georgia v. Ashcroft[59] that courts should not determine that a new redistricting plan has a retrogressive effect solely because the plan decreases the number of minority-majority districts. The court emphasized that judges should analyze various other factors under the "totality of the circumstances", such as whether the redistricting plan increases the number of "influence districts" in which a minority group is large enough to influence (but not decide) election outcomes. In 2006, Congress overturned this decision by amending Section 5 to explicitly state that "diminishing the ability [of a protected minority] to elect their preferred candidates of choice denies or abridges the right to vote within the meaning of" Section 5.[146] Uncertainty remains as to what this language precisely means and how courts may interpret it.[26]: 551–552, 916 

Before 2000, the "discriminatory purpose" prong of Section 5 was understood to mean any discriminatory purpose, which is the same standard used to determine whether discrimination is unconstitutional. In Reno v. Bossier Parish (Bossier Parish II) (2000),[58] the Supreme Court extended the retrogression standard, holding that for a voting change to have a "discriminatory purpose" under Section 5, the change must have been implemented for a retrogressive purpose. Therefore, a voting change intended to discriminate against a protected minority was permissible under Section 5 so long as the change was not intended to increase existing discrimination.[144]: 277–278  This change significantly reduced the number of instances in which preclearance was denied based on discriminatory purpose. In 2006, Congress overturned Bossier Parish II by amending Section 5 to explicitly define "purpose" to mean "any discriminatory purpose."[60]: 199–200, 207 [147]

Federal examiners and observers

Until the 2006 amendments to the Act,[57]: 50  Section 6 allowed the appointment of "federal examiners" to oversee certain jurisdictions' voter registration functions. Federal examiners could be assigned to a covered jurisdiction if the attorney general certified that

  1. The Department of Justice received 20 or more meritorious complaints that the covered jurisdiction denied its residents the right to vote based on race or language minority status; or
  2. The assignment of federal examiners was otherwise necessary to enforce the voting rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendments.[130]: 235–236 

Federal examiners had the authority to register voters, examine voter registration applications, and maintain voter rolls.[130]: 237  The goal of the federal examiner provision was to prevent jurisdictions from denying protected minorities the right to vote by engaging in discriminatory behavior in the voter registration process, such as refusing to register qualified applicants, purging qualified voters from the voter rolls, and limiting the hours during which persons could register. Federal examiners were used extensively in the years following the Act's enactment, but their importance waned over time; 1983 was the last year that a federal examiner registered a person to vote. In 2006, Congress repealed the provision.[130]: 238–239 

Under the Act's original framework, in any jurisdiction certified for federal examiners, the attorney general could additionally require the appointment of "federal observers". By 2006, the federal examiner provision was used solely as a means to appoint federal observers.[130]: 239  When Congress repealed the federal examiner provision in 2006, Congress amended Section 8 to allow for the assignment of federal observers to jurisdictions that satisfied the same certification criteria that had been used to appoint federal examiners.[57]: 50 

Federal observers are tasked with observing poll worker and voter conduct at polling places during an election and observing election officials tabulate the ballots.[130]: 248  The goal of the federal observer provision is to facilitate minority voter participation by deterring and documenting instances of discriminatory conduct in the election process, such as election officials denying qualified minority persons the right to cast a ballot, intimidation or harassment of voters on election day, or improper vote counting.[130]: 231–235  Discriminatory conduct that federal observers document may also serve as evidence in subsequent enforcement lawsuits.[130]: 233  Between 1965 and the Supreme Court's 2013 decision in Shelby County v. Holder to strike down the coverage formula, the attorney general certified 153 local governments across 11 states.[148] Because of time and resource constraints, federal observers are not assigned to every certified jurisdiction for every election.[130]: 230  Separate provisions allow for a certified jurisdiction to "bail out" of its certification.[148]

Bailout

Under Section 4(a), a covered jurisdiction may seek exemption from coverage through a process called "bailout."[54] To achieve an exemption, a covered jurisdiction must obtain a declaratory judgment from a three-judge panel of the District Court for D.C. that the jurisdiction is eligible to bail out.[12][54] As originally enacted, a covered jurisdiction was eligible to bail out if it had not used a test or device with a discriminatory purpose or effect during the 5 years preceding its bailout request.[43]: 22, 33–34  Therefore, a jurisdiction that requested to bail out in 1967 would have needed to prove that it had not misused a test or device since at least 1962. Until 1970, this effectively required a covered jurisdiction to prove that it had not misused a test or device since before the Act was enacted five years earlier in 1965,[43]: 6  making it impossible for many covered jurisdictions to bail out.[43]: 27  However, Section 4(a) also prohibited covered jurisdictions from using tests or devices in any manner, discriminatory or otherwise; hence, under the original act, a covered jurisdiction would become eligible for bailout in 1970 by simply complying with this requirement. But in the course of amending the Act in 1970 and 1975 to extend the special provisions, Congress also extended the period of time that a covered jurisdiction must not have misused a test or device to 10 years and then to 17 years, respectively.[43]: 7, 9  These extensions continued the effect of requiring jurisdictions to prove that they had not misused a test or device since before the Act's enactment in 1965.

In 1982, Congress amended Section 4(a) to make bailout easier to achieve in two ways. First, Congress provided that if a state is covered, local governments in that state may bail out even if the state is ineligible to bail out.[54] Second, Congress liberalized the eligibility criteria by replacing the 17-year requirement with a new standard, allowing a covered jurisdiction to bail out by proving that in the 10 years preceding its bailout request:

  1. The jurisdiction did not use a test or device with a discriminatory purpose or effect;
  2. No court determined that the jurisdiction denied or abridged the right to vote based on racial or language minority status;
  3. The jurisdiction complied with the preclearance requirement;
  4. The federal government did not assign federal examiners to the jurisdiction;
  5. The jurisdiction abolished discriminatory election practices; and
  6. The jurisdiction took affirmative steps to eliminate voter intimidation and expand voting opportunities for protected minorities.

Additionally, Congress required jurisdictions seeking bailout to produce evidence of minority registration and voting rates, including how these rates have changed over time and in comparison to the registration and voting rates of the majority. If the court determines that the covered jurisdiction is eligible for bailout, it will enter a declaratory judgment in the jurisdiction's favor. The court will retain jurisdiction for the following 10 years and may order the jurisdiction back into coverage if the jurisdiction subsequently engages in voting discrimination.[43][54][57]: 22–23 [149]

The 1982 amendment to the bailout eligibility standard went into effect on August 5, 1984.[54] Between that date and 2013, 196 jurisdictions bailed out of coverage through 38 bailout actions; in each instance, the attorney general consented to the bailout request.[126]: 54  Between that date and 2009, all jurisdictions that bailed out were located in Virginia.[54] In 2009, a municipal utility jurisdiction in Texas bailed out after the Supreme Court's opinion in Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No. 1 v. Holder (2009),[150] which held that local governments that do not register voters have the ability to bail out.[151] After this ruling, jurisdictions succeeded in at least 20 bailout actions before the Supreme Court held in Shelby County v. Holder (2013) that the coverage formula was unconstitutional.[126]: 54 

Separate provisions allow a covered jurisdiction that has been certified to receive federal observers to bail out of its certification alone. Under Section 13, the attorney general may terminate the certification of a jurisdiction if 1) more than 50 percent of the jurisdiction's minority voting age population is registered to vote, and 2) there is no longer reasonable cause to believe that residents may experience voting discrimination. Alternatively, the District Court for D.C. may order the certification terminated.[130]: 237, 239 [148]

Bilingual election requirements

Two provisions require certain jurisdictions to provide election materials to voters in multiple languages: Section 4(f)(4) and Section 203(c). A jurisdiction covered by either provision must provide all materials related to an election—such as voter registration materials, ballots, notices, and instructions—in the language of any applicable language minority group residing in the jurisdiction.[56]: 209  Language minority groups protected by these provisions include Asian Americans, Hispanics, Native Americans, and Native Alaskans.[152] Congress enacted the provisions to break down language barriers and combat pervasive language discrimination against the protected groups.[56]: 200, 209 

Section 4(f)(4) applies to any jurisdiction encompassed by the Section 4(b) coverage formula where more than five percent of the citizen voting age population are members of a single language minority group. Section 203(c) contains a formula that is separate from the Section 4(b) coverage formula, and therefore jurisdictions covered solely by 203(c) are not subject to the Act's other special provisions, such as preclearance. The Section 203(c) formula encompasses jurisdictions where the following conditions exist:

  1. A single language minority is present that has an English-illiteracy rate higher than the national average; and
  2. Either:
    1. The number of "limited-English proficient" members of the language minority group is at least 10,000 voting-age citizens or large enough to comprise at least five percent of the jurisdiction's voting-age citizen population; or
    2. The jurisdiction is a political subdivision that contains an Indian reservation, and more than five percent of the jurisdiction's American Indian or Alaska Native voting-age citizens are members of a single language minority and are limited-English proficient.[56]: 223–224 

Section 203(b) defines "limited-English proficient" as being "unable to speak or understand English adequately enough to participate in the electoral process".[56]: 223  Determinations as to which jurisdictions satisfy the Section 203(c) criteria occur once a decade following completion of the decennial census; at these times, new jurisdictions may come into coverage while others may have their coverage terminated. Additionally, under Section 203(d), a jurisdiction may "bail out" of Section 203(c) coverage by proving in federal court that no language minority group within the jurisdiction has an English illiteracy rate that is higher than the national illiteracy rate.[56]: 226  After the 2010 census, 150 jurisdictions across 25 states were covered under Section 203(c), including statewide coverage of California, Texas, and Florida.[153]

Impact

 
Final page of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, signed by United States President Lyndon B. Johnson, President of the Senate Hubert Humphrey, and Speaker of the House John McCormack

After its enactment in 1965, the law immediately decreased racial discrimination in voting. The suspension of literacy tests and the assignments of federal examiners and observers allowed for high numbers of racial minorities to register to vote.[94]: 702  Nearly 250,000 African Americans registered in 1965, one-third of whom were registered by federal examiners.[154] In covered jurisdictions, less than one-third (29.3 percent) of the African American population was registered in 1965; by 1967, this number increased to more than half (52.1 percent),[94]: 702  and a majority of African American residents became registered to vote in 9 of the 13 Southern states.[154] Similar increases were seen in the number of African Americans elected to office: between 1965 and 1985, African Americans elected as state legislators in the 11 former Confederate states increased from 3 to 176.[155]: 112  Nationwide, the number of African American elected officials increased from 1,469 in 1970 to 4,912 in 1980.[121]: 919  By 2011, the number was approximately 10,500.[156] Similarly, registration rates for language minority groups increased after Congress enacted the bilingual election requirements in 1975 and amended them in 1992. In 1973, the percent of Hispanics registered to vote was 34.9 percent; by 2006, that amount nearly doubled. The number of Asian Americans registered to vote in 1996 increased 58 percent by 2006.[56]: 233–235 

After the Act's initial success in combating tactics designed to deny minorities access to the polls, the Act became predominately used as a tool to challenge racial vote dilution.[94]: 691  Starting in the 1970s, the attorney general commonly raised Section 5 objections to voting changes that decreased the effectiveness of racial minorities' votes, including discriminatory annexations, redistricting plans, and election methods such as at-large election systems, runoff election requirements, and prohibitions on bullet voting.[140]: 105–106  In total, 81 percent (2,541) of preclearance objections made between 1965 and 2006 were based on vote dilution.[140]: 102  Claims brought under Section 2 have also predominately concerned vote dilution.[94]: 708–709  Between the 1982 creation of the Section 2 results test and 2006, at least 331 Section 2 lawsuits resulted in published judicial opinions. In the 1980s, 60 percent of Section 2 lawsuits challenged at-large election systems; in the 1990s, 37.2 percent challenged at-large election systems and 38.5 percent challenged redistricting plans. Overall, plaintiffs succeeded in 37.2 percent of the 331 lawsuits, and they were more likely to succeed in lawsuits brought against covered jurisdictions.[157]: 654–656 

By enfranchising racial minorities, the Act facilitated a political realignment of the Democratic and Republican parties. Between 1890 and 1965, Black disenfranchisement enabled the Democratic Party to dominate Southern politics. After Johnson signed the Act into law, newly enfranchised Black voters began to push the Democratic Party to the left throughout the South; this in turn pushed Southern white conservatives to switch their support from the Democratic to Republican party.[158]: 290  This trend caused the two parties to ideologically polarize, with the Democratic Party becoming more Liberal and the Republican Party becoming more Conservative.[158]: 290  The trends also created competition between the two parties,[158]: 290  which Republicans capitalized on by implementing the Southern strategy.[159] Over the subsequent decades, the creation of majority-minority districts to remedy racial vote dilution claims also contributed to these developments. By packing liberal-leaning racial minorities into small numbers of majority-minority districts, large numbers of surrounding districts became more solidly white, conservative, and Republican. While this increased the elected representation of racial minorities as intended, it also decreased white Democratic representation and increased the representation of Republicans overall.[158]: 292  By the mid-1990s, these trends culminated in a political realignment: the Democratic Party and the Republican Party became more ideologically polarized and defined as liberal and conservative parties, respectively; and both parties came to compete for electoral success in the South,[158]: 294  with the Republican Party controlling most of Southern politics.[23]: 203 

Research shows that the Act successfully and massively increased voter turnout and voter registration, in particular among African Americans.[17][18] The act has also been linked to concrete outcomes, such as greater public goods provision (such as public education) for areas with higher black population shares and more members of Congress who vote for civil rights-related legislation.[20][21] A 2016 study in the American Journal of Political Science found "that members of Congress who represented jurisdictions subject to the preclearance requirement were substantially more supportive of civil rights-related legislation than legislators who did not represent covered jurisdictions."[20] A 2013 Quarterly Journal of Economics study found that the Act boosted voter turnout and increases in public goods transfers from state governments to localities with higher black population.[21] A 2018 study in The Journal of Politics found that Section 5 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act "increased black voter registration by 14–19 percentage points, white registration by 10–13 percentage points, and overall voter turnout by 10–19 percentage points. Additional results for Democratic vote share suggest that some of this overall increase in turnout may have come from reactionary whites."[17] A 2019 study in the American Economic Journal found that preclearance substantially increased turnout among minorities, even as far as to 2012 (the year prior to the Supreme Court ruling ending preclearance).[18] The study estimates that preclearance led to an increase in minority turnout of 17 percentage points.[18] A 2020 study found that the jurisdictions which had previously been covered by preclearance massively increased the rate of voter registration purges after the 2013 United States Supreme Court Shelby County v. Holder decision in which the “coverage formula” in Section 4(b) of the VRA that determined which jurisdictions had to presubmit changes in their election policies for federal approval was struck down.[15] Another 2020 study found that VRA coverage halved the incidence and the onset of political violence.[160]

Constitutionality

Voter eligibility provisions

Early in the history of enforcement for the Act, the Supreme Court of the United States was rather quick to address both the constitutionality of the Act in its entirety as well as the constitutionality of several provisions relating to voter qualifications and prerequisites to voting. During the following year, in 1966, two legal cases were adjudicated by the Court regarding the Act. On the seventh day of March, in the landmark case of South Carolina v. Katzenbach (1966), the Supreme Court held that the Voting Rights Act of 1965 is a constitutional method to enforce the Fifteenth Amendment. A few months later, on the thirteenth day of June, the Supreme Court held that section 4(e) of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was constitutional in the case of Katzenbach v. Morgan (1966). This section prohibits jurisdictions from administering literacy tests to citizens who attain a sixth-grade education in an American school in which the predominant language was Spanish, such as schools in Puerto Rico.[161] Although the Court had earlier held that literacy tests did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment, in the case of Lassiter v. Northampton County Board of Elections (1959), the Katzenbach-Morgan case allowed Congress could enforce Fourteenth Amendment rights—such as the right to vote—by prohibiting conduct that it deemed to interfere with such rights, even if that conduct may not be independently unconstitutional.[162]: 405–406 [163]: 652–656  After Congress created a nationwide ban on all literacy tests and similar devices in 1970, in the case of Oregon v. Mitchell (1970), the Supreme Court upheld the ban as being constitutional.[122][164] In that case, the Court also addressed the constitutionality of various other provisions relating to voter qualifications and prerequisites to voting; the Court upheld Section 202 of the 1965 law, which prohibits every state and local government from requiring people to live in their borders for longer than 30 days before allowing them to vote in a presidential election. Additionally, the Court upheld the provision lowering the minimum voting age to 18 years in federal elections, but it held that Congress exceeded its power by lowering the voting age to 18 in state elections; this precipitated the ratification of the Twenty-sixth Amendment the following year, which lowered the voting age in all elections to from 21 years to 18 years in age. The Court was deeply divided in the Oregon-Mitchell case and a majority of the justices did not agree on one rationale for the holding.[122]: 353 [164]: 118–121 

Section 2 results test

The question of constitutionality regarding section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which contains a general prohibition on discriminatory voting laws, has not been definitively explained by the Supreme Court. As amended in 1982, section 2 prohibits any voting practice that has a discriminatory effect, irrespective of whether the practice was enacted or is administered for the purpose of discriminating. This "results test" contrasts with the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, both of which directly prohibit only purposeful discrimination. Given this disparity, whether the Supreme Court would uphold the constitutionality of section 2 as appropriate legislation that was passed to enforce the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, and under what rationale, remains unclear.[26]: 758–759 

In Mississippi Republican Executive Opinion v. Brooks (1984),[165] the Supreme Court summarily affirmed, without a written opinion, a lower court's decision that 1982 amendment to section 2 is constitutional.[166] Justice Rehnquist, joined by Chief Justice Burger, dissented from the opinion. They reasoned that the case presented complex constitutional issues that warranted a full hearing. When making later decisions, the Supreme Court is more likely to disregard a previous judgment if it lacks a written opinion, but for lower courts the Supreme Court's unwritten summary affirmances are as binding as are Supreme Court judgments with written opinions. Partially due to Brooks, the constitutionality of the section 2 results test has since been unanimously upheld by lower courts.[26]: 759–760 

The case of Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee (2021) evaluated the applicability of section 2 of the 1965 law in the wake of the decision in the case of Shelby County v. Holder (2013). The Democratic National Committee asserted a set of Arizona election laws and policies were discriminatory towards Hispanics and Native Americans under section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. While lower courts upheld the election laws, an en banc Ninth Circuit reversed the decision and found these laws to be in violation of section 2 of the 1965 law.[167] The Arizona law was upheld by the Supreme Court after it introduced the means to review section 2 challenges.[86][87][89]

Coverage formula and preclearance

The Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of the Section 5 preclearance requirement in three cases. The first case was South Carolina v. Katzenbach (1966),[168] which was decided about five months after the Act's enactment. The court held that Section 5 constituted a valid use of Congress's power to enforce the Fifteenth Amendment, reasoning that "exceptional circumstances" of pervasive racial discrimination, combined with the inadequacy of case-by-case litigation in ending that discrimination, justified the preclearance requirement.[168]: 334–335 [169]: 76  The court also upheld the constitutionality of the 1965 coverage formula, saying that it was "rational in both practice and theory" and that the bailout provision provided adequate relief for jurisdictions that may not deserve coverage.[168]: 330 [169]: 76–77 

The Supreme Court again upheld the preclearance requirement in City of Rome v. United States (1980).[170] The court held that because Congress had explicit constitutional power to enforce the Reconstruction Amendments "by appropriate legislation", the Act did not violate principles of federalism. The court also explicitly upheld the "discriminatory effect" prong of Section 5, stating that even though the Fifteenth Amendment directly prohibited only intentional discrimination, Congress could constitutionally prohibit unintentional discrimination to mitigate the risk that jurisdictions may engage in intentional discrimination. Finally, the court upheld the 1975 extension of Section 5 because of the record of discrimination that continued to persist in the covered jurisdictions. The court further suggested that the temporary nature of the special provisions was relevant to Section 5's constitutionality.[169]: 77–78 

The final case in which the Supreme Court upheld Section 5 was Lopez v. Monterey County (Lopez II) (1999).[171] In Lopez II, the court reiterated its reasoning in Katzenbach and Rome, and it upheld as constitutional the requirement that covered local governments obtain preclearance before implementing voting changes that their parent state required them to implement, even if the parent state was not itself a covered jurisdiction.[169]: 78 [172]: 447 

The 2006 extension of Section 5 was challenged before the Supreme Court in Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No. 1 v. Holder (2009).[150] The lawsuit was brought by a municipal water district in Texas that elected members to a water board. The District wished to move a voting location from a private home to a public school, but that change was subject to preclearance because Texas was a covered jurisdiction. The District did not register voters, and thus it did not appear to qualify as a "political subdivision" eligible to bail out of coverage. Although the court indicated in dicta (a non-binding part of the court's opinion) that Section 5 presented difficult constitutional questions, it did not declare Section 5 unconstitutional; instead, it interpreted the law to allow any covered local government, including one that does not register voters, to obtain an exemption from preclearance if it meets the bailout requirements.[173][174]

In a 5–4 decision in Shelby County v. Holder (2013),[175] the Supreme Court struck down Section 4(b) as unconstitutional.[13][134] The court reasoned that the coverage formula violates the constitutional principles of "equal sovereignty of the states" and federalism because its disparate treatment of the states is "based on 40 year-old facts having no logical relationship to the present day", which makes the formula unresponsive to current needs.[13][133] The court did not strike down Section 5, but without Section 4(b), no jurisdiction may be subject to Section 5 preclearance unless Congress enacts a new coverage formula.[14] After the decision, several states that were fully or partially covered—including Texas, Mississippi, North Carolina, and South Carolina—implemented laws that were previously denied preclearance. This prompted new legal challenges to these laws under other provisions unaffected by the court's decision, such as Section 2.[176]: 189–200  Research has shown that the coverage formula and the requirement of preclearance substantially increased turnout among racial minorities, even as far as the year before Shelby County.[18] Some jurisdictions that had previously been covered by the coverage formula increased the rate of voter registration purges after Shelby County.[177] On 1 July 2021, the Act's preclearance requirements were further weakened at the state and local level following the Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee in a 6-3 Supreme Court ruling which held that Section 2 preclearance provisions could not apply to out-of-precinct voting or ballot collecting.[16][11]

Racial gerrymandering

While Section 2 and Section 5 prohibit jurisdictions from drawing electoral districts that dilute the votes of protected minorities, the Supreme Court has held that in some instances, the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prevents jurisdictions from drawing district lines to favor protected minorities. The court first recognized the justiciability of affirmative "racial gerrymandering" claims in Shaw v. Reno (1993).[178] In Miller v. Johnson (1995),[179] the court explained that a redistricting plan is constitutionally suspect if the jurisdiction used race as the "predominant factor" in determining how to draw district lines. For race to "predominate", the jurisdiction must prioritize racial considerations over traditional redistricting principles, which include "compactness, contiguity, [and] respect for political subdivisions or communities defined by actual shared interests."[179]: 916 [180]: 621  If a court concludes that racial considerations predominated, then the redistricting plan is considered "racially gerrymandered" and must be subjected to strict scrutiny, meaning that the redistricting plan will be upheld as constitutional only if it is narrowly tailored to advance a compelling state interest. In Bush v. Vera (1996),[181]: 983  a plurality of the Supreme Court assumed that complying with Section 2 or Section 5 constituted compelling interests, and lower courts have allowed only these two interests to justify racial gerrymandering.[26]: 877 

See also

Federal laws

Attempted federal legislation

State laws

More

Notes

  1. ^ In Gingles, the Supreme Court held that the Gingles test applies to claims that an at-large election scheme results in vote dilution. The court later held, in Growe v. Emison, 507 U.S. 25 (1993), that the Gingles test also applies to claims that a redistricting plan results in vote dilution through the arrangement of single-member districts.[97]: 1006 
  2. ^ The Courts of Appeals in the Fifth Circuit,[102] Eleventh Circuit,[103] and Ninth Circuit[104] have either explicitly held that coalition suits are allowed under Section 2 or assumed that such suits are permissible, while those in the Sixth Circuit[105] and Seventh Circuit[106] have rejected such suits.[26]: 703 
  3. ^ Courts of Appeals in the Second Circuit[109] and Fourth Circuit[110] have held that such proof is not an absolute requirement for liability but is a relevant additional factor under the "totality of the circumstances" test. In contrast, the Fifth Circuit has held that such proof is a required component of the third precondition.[26]: 711–712 [111]
  4. ^ The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that challenges to majority-vote requirements under Section 2 are not cognizable,[115] while the Eastern District of Arkansas held the opposite.[26]: 752–753 [116]
  5. ^ The Supreme Court subsequently held that plaintiffs may alternatively bring Section 5 enforcement actions in state courts.[26]: 534 [138]

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Further reading

  • Ansolabehere, Stephen; Persily, Nathaniel; Stewart, Charles III (2010). "Race, Region, and Vote Choice in the 2008 Election: Implications for the Future of the Voting Rights Act". Harvard Law Review. 123 (6): 1385–1436.
  • Berman, Ari (2015). Give Us the Ballot: The Modern Struggle for Voting Rights in America. New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0-3741-5827-9.
  • Bullock, Charles S. III, Ronald Keith Gaddie, and Justin J. Wert, eds. (2016). The Rise and Fall of the Voting Rights Act by (University of Oklahoma Press; 240 pages) focus on period between the 2006 revision of the 1965 act and the invalidation of one of its key provisions in Shelby County v. Holder (2013).
  • Davidson, Chandler (1984). Minority Vote Dilution. Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press. ISBN 978-0-88258-156-9.
  • Davidson, Chandler (1994). Quiet Revolution in the South: The Impact of the Voting Rights Act, 1965–1990. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-02108-9.
  • Finley, Keith M. (2008). Delaying the Dream: Southern Senators and the Fight Against Civil Rights, 1938–1965. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-3345-3.
  • Garrow, David J. (1978). Protest at Selma: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-02498-2.
  • Lawson, Steven F. (1976). Black Ballots: Voting Rights in the South, 1944–1969. New York, NY: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-7391-0087-5.
  • Smooth, Wendy (September 2006). "Intersectionality in electoral politics: a mess worth making". Politics & Gender. 2 (3): 400–414. doi:10.1017/S1743923X06261087. S2CID 145812097.

External links

  • Voting Rights Act of 1965 (PDF/details) as amended in the GPO Statute Compilations collection
  • (PDF). Archived from the original on March 7, 2019.
  • , U.S. Commission on Civil Rights
  • Voting Rights Act: Past, Present, and Future October 9, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, Justice Talking
  • The Voting Rights Act of 1965: Background and Overview (PDF), Congressional Research Service
  • "The Selma to Montgomery Voting Rights March: Shaking the Conscience of the Nation", a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places lesson plan
  • Voting Rights Act: Evidence of Continued Need: Hearing before the Subcommittee on the Constitution of the Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, One Hundred Ninth Congress, Second Session, March 8, 2006, Vol. 1 Vol. 2 Vol. 3
  • The Great Society Congress
  • 111 Congressional Record (Bound) - Volume 111, Part 2 (May 25, 1965 to June 8, 1965), Congressional Record Senate May 26 vote roll call p. 11752
  • 111 Congressional Record (Bound) - Volume 111, Part 12 (July 7, 1965 to July 16, 1965), Congressional Record House July 9 vote roll call pp. 16285–16286
  • 111 Congressional Record (Bound) - Volume 111, Part 14 (July 28, 1965 to August 9, 1965), Congressional Record House August 3 conference report vote roll call p. 19201
  • 111 Congressional Record (Bound) - Volume 111, Part 14 (July 28, 1965 to August 9, 1965), Congressional Record Senate August 4 conference report vote roll call p. 19378

voting, rights, 1965, landmark, piece, federal, legislation, united, states, that, prohibits, racial, discrimination, voting, signed, into, president, lyndon, johnson, during, height, civil, rights, movement, august, 1965, congress, later, amended, five, times. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 is a landmark piece of federal legislation in the United States that prohibits racial discrimination in voting 7 8 It was signed into law by President Lyndon B Johnson during the height of the civil rights movement on August 6 1965 and Congress later amended the Act five times to expand its protections 7 Designed to enforce the voting rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution the Act sought to secure the right to vote for racial minorities throughout the country especially in the South According to the U S Department of Justice the Act is considered to be the most effective piece of federal civil rights legislation ever enacted in the country 9 It is also one of the most far reaching pieces of civil rights legislation in U S history 10 Voting Rights Act of 1965Long titleAn Act to enforce the fifteenth amendment of the Constitution of the United States and for other purposes Acronyms colloquial VRANicknamesVoting Rights ActEnacted bythe 89th United States CongressEffectiveAugust 6 1965CitationsPublic law89 110Statutes at Large79 Stat 437CodificationTitles amendedTitle 52 Voting and ElectionsU S C sections created52 U S C 10101 52 U S C 10301 10314 52 U S C 10501 10508 52 U S C 10701 10702Legislative historyIntroduced in the Senate as S 1564h by Mike Mansfield D MT and Everett Dirksen R IL on March 17 1965Committee consideration by JudiciaryPassed the Senate on May 26 1965 77 19 Passed the House with amendment on July 9 1965 333 85 Reported by the joint conference committee on July 29 1965 agreed to by the House on August 3 1965 328 74 and by the Senate on August 4 1965 79 18 Signed into law by President Lyndon B Johnson on August 6 1965Major amendmentsVoting Rights Act Amendments of 1970 1 Voting Rights Act of 1965 Amendments of 1975 2 Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1982 3 Voting Rights Language Assistance Act of 1992 4 Fannie Lou Hamer Rosa Parks Coretta Scott King Cesar E Chavez Barbara C Jordan William C Velasquez and Dr Hector P Garcia Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and Amendments Act of 2006 5 6 United States Supreme Court casesList South Carolina v Katzenbach 383 U S 301 1966 Katzenbach v Morgan 384 U S 641 1966 Cardona v Power 384 U S 672 1966 Allen v State Board of Elections 393 U S 544 1969 Gaston County v United States 395 U S 285 1969 Oregon v Mitchell 400 U S 112 1970 City of Richmond v United States 422 U S 358 1975 East Carroll Parish Sch Bd v Marshall 424 U S 636 1976 Beer v United States 425 U S 130 1976 United Jewish Organizations v Carey 430 U S 144 1977 Mobile v Bolden 446 U S 55 1980 City of Rome v United States 446 U S 156 1980 Escambia County v McMillan 466 U S 48 1984 Mississippi Republican Executive Committee v Brooks 469 U S 1002 1984 Thornburg v Gingles 478 U S 30 1986 Clark v Roemer 500 U S 646 1991 Chisom v Roemer 501 U S 380 1991 Houston Lawyers Association v Attorney General of Texas 501 U S 419 1991 Presley v Etowah County Comm n 502 U S 491 1992 Growe v Emison 507 U S 25 1993 Voinovich v Quilter 507 U S 146 1993 Shaw v Reno 509 U S 630 1993 Holder v Hall 512 U S 874 1994 Johnson v De Grandy 512 U S 997 1994 Miller v Johnson 515 U S 900 1995 Morse v Republican Party of Virginia 517 U S 186 1996 Shaw v Hunt 517 U S 899 1996 Bush v Vera 517 U S 952 1996 Lopez v Monterey County 519 U S 9 1996 Young v Fordice 520 U S 273 1997 Reno v Bossier Parish School Board 520 U S 471 1997 Abrams v Johnson 521 U S 74 1997 Foreman v Dallas County 521 U S 979 1997 City of Monroe v United States 522 U S 34 1997 Texas v United States 523 U S 296 1998 Lopez v Monterey County 525 U S 266 1999 Reno v Bossier Parish School Board 528 U S 320 2000 Branch v Smith 538 U S 254 2003 Georgia v Ashcroft 539 U S 461 2003 League of United Latin American Citizens v Perry 548 U S 399 2006 Riley v Kennedy 553 U S 406 2008 Bartlett v Strickland 556 U S 1 2009 Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No 1 v Holder 557 U S 193 2009 Perry v Perez 565 U S 388 2012 Shelby County v Holder 570 U S 529 2013 Alabama Legislative Black Caucus v Alabama No 13 895 575 U S 2015 Bethune Hill v Virginia State Bd of Elections No 15 680 580 U S 2017 Cooper v Harris No 15 1262 581 U S 2017 North Carolina v Covington No 16 1023 581 U S 2017 Abbott v Perez No 17 586 585 U S 2018 North Carolina v Covington No 17 1364 585 U S 2018 Brnovich v Democratic National Committee No 19 1257 594 U S 2021 Merrill v Milligan pending The act contains numerous provisions that regulate elections The act s general provisions provide nationwide protections for voting rights Section 2 is a general provision that prohibits state and local government from imposing any voting rule that results in the denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen to vote on account of race or color or membership in a language minority group 11 Other general provisions specifically outlaw literacy tests and similar devices that were historically used to disenfranchise racial minorities The act also contains special provisions that apply to only certain jurisdictions A core special provision is the Section 5 preclearance requirement which prohibited certain jurisdictions from implementing any change affecting voting without first receiving confirmation from the U S attorney general or the U S District Court for D C that the change does not discriminate against protected minorities 12 Another special provision requires jurisdictions containing significant language minority populations to provide bilingual ballots and other election materials Section 5 and most other special provisions applied to jurisdictions encompassed by the coverage formula prescribed in Section 4 b The coverage formula was originally designed to encompass jurisdictions that engaged in egregious voting discrimination in 1965 and Congress updated the formula in 1970 and 1975 In Shelby County v Holder 2013 the U S Supreme Court struck down the coverage formula as unconstitutional reasoning that it was no longer responsive to current conditions 13 The court did not strike down Section 5 but without a coverage formula Section 5 is unenforceable 14 The jurisdictions which had previously been covered by the coverage formula massively increased the rate of voter registration purges after the Shelby decision 15 In 2021 the Brnovich v Democratic National Committee Supreme Court ruling reinterpreted Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 substantially weakening it 16 11 The ruling interpreted the totality of circumstances language of Section 2 to mean that it does not generally prohibit voting rules that have disparate impact on the groups that it sought to protect including a rule blocked under Section 5 before the Court inactivated that section in Shelby County v Holder 16 11 In particular the ruling held that fears of election fraud could justify such rules even without evidence that any such fraud had occurred in the past or that the new rule would make elections safer 11 Research shows that the Act had successfully and massively increased voter turnout and voter registrations in particular among black people 17 18 19 The Act has also been linked to concrete outcomes such as greater public goods provision such as public education for areas with higher black population shares and more members of Congress who vote for civil rights related legislation 20 21 Contents 1 Background 2 Legislative history 2 1 Original bill 2 1 1 Senate 2 1 2 House of Representatives 2 1 3 Conference committee 2 2 Amendments 3 Provisions 3 1 General provisions 3 1 1 General prohibition of discriminatory voting laws 3 1 2 Specific prohibitions 3 1 3 Bail in 3 2 Special provisions 3 2 1 Coverage formula 3 2 2 Preclearance requirement 3 2 3 Federal examiners and observers 3 2 4 Bailout 3 2 5 Bilingual election requirements 4 Impact 5 Constitutionality 5 1 Voter eligibility provisions 5 2 Section 2 results test 5 3 Coverage formula and preclearance 5 4 Racial gerrymandering 6 See also 6 1 Federal laws 6 2 Attempted federal legislation 6 3 State laws 6 4 More 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground EditFurther information Disenfranchisement after the Reconstruction era As initially ratified the United States Constitution granted each state complete discretion to determine voter qualifications for its residents 22 23 50 After the Civil War the three Reconstruction Amendments were ratified and limited this discretion The Thirteenth Amendment 1865 prohibits slavery except as a punishment for crime the Fourteenth Amendment 1868 grants citizenship to anyone born or naturalized in the United States and guarantees every person due process and equal protection rights and the Fifteenth Amendment 1870 provides that t he right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race color or previous condition of servitude These Amendments also empower Congress to enforce their provisions through appropriate legislation 24 To enforce the Reconstruction Amendments Congress passed the Enforcement Acts in the 1870s The acts criminalized the obstruction of a citizen s voting rights and provided for federal supervision of the electoral process including voter registration 25 310 However in 1875 the Supreme Court struck down parts of the legislation as unconstitutional in United States v Cruikshank and United States v Reese 26 97 After the Reconstruction Era ended in 1877 enforcement of these laws became erratic and in 1894 Congress repealed most of their provisions 25 310 Southern states generally sought to disenfranchise racial minorities during and after Reconstruction From 1868 to 1888 electoral fraud and violence throughout the South suppressed the African American vote 27 From 1888 to 1908 Southern states legalized disenfranchisement by enacting Jim Crow laws they amended their constitutions and passed legislation to impose various voting restrictions including literacy tests poll taxes property ownership requirements moral character tests requirements that voter registration applicants interpret particular documents and grandfather clauses that allowed otherwise ineligible persons to vote if their grandfathers voted which excluded many African Americans whose grandfathers had been slaves or otherwise ineligible 25 27 During this period the Supreme Court generally upheld efforts to discriminate against racial minorities In Giles v Harris 1903 the court held that regardless of the Fifteenth Amendment the judiciary did not have the remedial power to force states to register racial minorities to vote 26 100 Alabama police in 1965 attack voting rights marchers on Bloody Sunday the first of the Selma to Montgomery marches Prior to the enactment of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 there were several efforts to stop the disenfranchisement of black voters by Southern states 7 Besides the above mentioned literacy tests and poll taxes other bureaucratic restrictions were used to deny them the right to vote African Americans also risked harassment intimidation economic reprisals and physical violence when they tried to register or vote As a result very few African Americans were registered voters and they had very little if any political power either locally or nationally 28 In the 1950s the Civil Rights Movement increased pressure on the federal government to protect the voting rights of racial minorities In 1957 Congress passed the first civil rights legislation since Reconstruction the Civil Rights Act of 1957 This legislation authorized the attorney general to sue for injunctive relief on behalf of persons whose Fifteenth Amendment rights were denied created the Civil Rights Division within the Department of Justice to enforce civil rights through litigation and created the Commission on Civil Rights to investigate voting rights deprivations Further protections were enacted in the Civil Rights Act of 1960 which allowed federal courts to appoint referees to conduct voter registration in jurisdictions that engaged in voting discrimination against racial minorities 9 Although these acts helped empower courts to remedy violations of federal voting rights strict legal standards made it difficult for the Department of Justice to successfully pursue litigation For example to win a discrimination lawsuit against a state that maintained a literacy test the department needed to prove that the rejected voter registration applications of racial minorities were comparable to the accepted applications of whites This involved comparing thousands of applications in each of the state s counties in a process that could last months The department s efforts were further hampered by resistance from local election officials who would claim to have misplaced the voter registration records of racial minorities remove registered racial minorities from the electoral rolls and resign so that voter registration ceased Moreover the department often needed to appeal lawsuits several times before the judiciary provided relief because many federal district court judges opposed racial minority suffrage Thus between 1957 and 1964 the African American voter registration rate in the South increased only marginally even though the department litigated 71 voting rights lawsuits 26 514 Efforts to stop the disfranchisement by the Southern states had achieved only modest success overall and in some areas had proved almost entirely ineffectual because the Department of Justice s efforts to eliminate discriminatory election practices by litigation on a case by case basis had been unsuccessful in opening up the registration process as soon as one discriminatory practice or procedure was proven to be unconstitutional and enjoined a new one would be substituted in its place and litigation would have to commence anew 7 Congress responded to rampant discrimination against racial minorities in public accommodations and government services by passing the Civil Rights Act of 1964 The act included some voting rights protections it required registrars to equally administer literacy tests in writing to each voter and to accept applications that contained minor errors and it created a rebuttable presumption that persons with a sixth grade education were sufficiently literate to vote 23 97 29 30 However despite lobbying from civil rights leaders the Act did not prohibit most forms of voting discrimination 31 253 President Lyndon B Johnson recognized this and shortly after the 1964 elections in which Democrats gained overwhelming majorities in both chambers of Congress he privately instructed Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach to draft the goddamndest toughest voting rights act that you can 23 48 50 However Johnson did not publicly push for the legislation at the time his advisers warned him of political costs for vigorously pursuing a voting rights bill so soon after Congress had passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Johnson was concerned that championing voting rights would endanger his Great Society reforms by angering Southern Democrats in Congress 23 47 48 50 52 Following the 1964 elections civil rights organizations such as the Southern Christian Leadership Conference SCLC and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee SNCC pushed for federal action to protect the voting rights of racial minorities 31 254 255 Their efforts culminated in protests in Alabama particularly in the city of Selma where County Sheriff Jim Clark s police force violently resisted African American voter registration efforts Speaking about the voting rights push in Selma James Forman of SNCC said Our strategy as usual was to force the U S government to intervene in case there were arrests and if they did not intervene that inaction would once again prove the government was not on our side and thus intensify the development of a mass consciousness among blacks Our slogan for this drive was One Man One Vote 31 255 In January 1965 Martin Luther King Jr James Bevel 32 33 and other civil rights leaders organized several peaceful demonstrations in Selma which were violently attacked by police and white counter protesters Throughout January and February these protests received national media coverage and drew attention to the issue of voting rights King and other demonstrators were arrested during a march on February 1 for violating an anti parade ordinance this inspired similar marches in the following days causing hundreds more to be arrested 31 259 261 On February 4 civil rights leader Malcolm X gave a militant speech in Selma in which he said that many African Americans did not support King s nonviolent approach 31 262 he later privately said that he wanted to frighten whites into supporting King 23 69 The next day King was released and a letter he wrote addressing voting rights Letter From A Selma Jail appeared in The New York Times 31 262 With increasing national attention focused on Selma and voting rights President Johnson reversed his decision to delay voting rights legislation On February 6 he announced he would send a proposal to Congress 23 69 Johnson did not reveal the proposal s content or disclose when it would come before Congress 31 264 On February 18 in Marion Alabama state troopers violently broke up a nighttime voting rights march during which officer James Bonard Fowler shot and killed young African American protester Jimmie Lee Jackson who was unarmed and protecting his mother 31 265 34 Spurred by this event and at the initiation of Bevel 31 267 32 33 35 81 86 on March 7 SCLC and SNCC began the first of the Selma to Montgomery marches in which Selma residents intended to march to Alabama s capital Montgomery to highlight voting rights issues and present Governor George Wallace with their grievances On the first march demonstrators were stopped by state and county police on horseback at the Edmund Pettus Bridge near Selma The police shot tear gas into the crowd and trampled protesters Televised footage of the scene which became known as Bloody Sunday generated outrage across the country 26 515 A second march was held on March 9 which became known as Turnaround Tuesday That evening three white Unitarian ministers who participated in the march were attacked on the street and beaten with clubs by four Ku Klux Klan members 36 The worst injured was Reverend James Reeb from Boston who died on Thursday March 11 37 In the wake of the events in Selma President Johnson addressing a televised joint session of Congress on March 15 called on legislators to enact expansive voting rights legislation He concluded his speech with the words we shall overcome a major anthem of the civil rights movement 31 278 38 The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was introduced in Congress two days later while civil rights leaders now under the protection of federal troops led a march of 25 000 people from Selma to Montgomery 26 516 31 279 282 Legislative history Edit United States President Lyndon B Johnson Martin Luther King Jr and Rosa Parks at the signing of the Voting Rights Act on August 6 1965 Efforts to eliminate discriminatory election practices by litigation on a case by case basis by the United States Department of Justice had been unsuccessful and existing federal anti discrimination laws were not sufficient to overcome the resistance by state officials to enforcement of the 15th Amendment Against this backdrop Congress came to the conclusion that a new comprehensive federal bill was necessary to break the grip of state disfranchisement 7 The United States Supreme Court explained this in South Carolina v Katzenbach 1966 with the following words In recent years Congress has repeatedly tried to cope with the problem by facilitating case by case litigation against voting discrimination The Civil Rights Act of 1957 authorized the Attorney General to seek injunctions against public and private interference with the right to vote on racial grounds Perfecting amendments in the Civil Rights Act of 1960 permitted the joinder of States as parties defendant gave the Attorney General access to local voting records and authorized courts to register voters in areas of systematic discrimination Title I of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 expedited the hearing of voting cases before three judge courts and outlawed some of the tactics used to disqualify Negroes from voting in federal elections Despite the earnest efforts of the Justice Department and of many federal judges these new laws have done little to cure the problem of voting discrimination The previous legislation has proved ineffective for a number of reasons Voting suits are unusually onerous to prepare sometimes requiring as many as 6 000 man hours spent combing through registration records in preparation for trial Litigation has been exceedingly slow in part because of the ample opportunities for delay afforded voting officials and others involved in the proceedings Even when favorable decisions have finally been obtained some of the States affected have merely switched to discriminatory devices not covered by the federal decrees or have enacted difficult new tests designed to prolong the existing disparity between white and Negro registration Alternatively certain local officials have defied and evaded court orders or have simply closed their registration offices to freeze the voting rolls The provision of the 1960 law authorizing registration by federal officers has had little impact on local maladministration because of its procedural complexities 39 In South Carolina v Katzenbach 1966 the Supreme Court also held that Congress had the power the pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965 under its Enforcement Powers stemming from the Fifteenth Amendment Congress exercised its authority under the Fifteenth Amendment in an inventive manner when it enacted the Voting Rights Act of 1965 First the measure prescribes remedies for voting discrimination which go into effect without any need for prior adjudication This was clearly a legitimate response to the problem for which there is ample precedent under other constitutional provisions See Katzenbach v McClung 379 U S 294 379 U S 302 304 United States v Darby 312 U S 100 312 U S 120 121 Congress had found that case by case litigation was inadequate to combat widespread and persistent discrimination in voting because of the inordinate amount of time and energy required to overcome the obstructionist tactics invariably encountered in these lawsuits After enduring nearly a century of systematic resistance to the Fifteenth Amendment Congress might well decide to shift the advantage of time and inertia from the perpetrators of the evil to its victims Second the Act intentionally confines these remedies to a small number of States and political subdivisions which in most instances were familiar to Congress by name This too was a permissible method of dealing with the problem Congress had learned that substantial voting discrimination presently occurs in certain sections of the country and it knew no way of accurately forecasting whether the evil might spread elsewhere in the future In acceptable legislative fashion Congress chose to limit its attention to the geographic areas where immediate action seemed necessary See McGowan v Maryland 366 U S 420 366 U S 427 Salsburg v Maryland 346 U S 545 346 U S 550 554 The doctrine of the equality of States invoked by South Carolina does not bar this approach for that doctrine applies only to the terms upon which States are admitted to the Union and not to the remedies for local evils which have subsequently appeared See Coyle v Smith 221 U S 559 and cases cited therein 40 Original bill Edit Senate Edit The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was introduced in Congress on March 17 1965 as S 1564 and it was jointly sponsored by Senate majority leader Mike Mansfield D MT and Senate minority leader Everett Dirksen R IL both of whom had worked with Attorney General Katzenbach to draft the bill s language 41 Although Democrats held two thirds of the seats in both chambers of Congress after the 1964 Senate elections 23 49 Johnson worried that Southern Democrats would filibuster the legislation because they had opposed other civil rights efforts He enlisted Dirksen to help gain Republican support Dirksen did not originally intend to support voting rights legislation so soon after supporting the Civil Rights Act of 1964 but he expressed willingness to accept revolutionary legislation after learning about the police violence against marchers in Selma on Bloody Sunday 23 95 96 Given Dirksen s key role in helping Katzenbach draft the legislation it became known informally as the Dirksenbach bill 23 96 After Mansfield and Dirksen introduced the bill 64 additional senators agreed to cosponsor it 23 150 with a total 46 Democratic and 20 Republican cosponsors 42 The bill contained several special provisions that targeted certain state and local governments a coverage formula that determined which jurisdictions were subject to the Act s other special provisions covered jurisdictions a preclearance requirement that prohibited covered jurisdictions from implementing changes to their voting procedures without first receiving approval from the U S attorney general or the U S District Court for D C that the changes were not discriminatory and the suspension of tests or devices such as literacy tests in covered jurisdictions The bill also authorized the assignment of federal examiners to register voters and of federal observers to monitor elections to covered jurisdictions that were found to have engaged in egregious discrimination The bill set these special provisions to expire after five years 25 319 320 26 520 524 43 5 6 The scope of the coverage formula was a matter of contentious congressional debate The coverage formula reached a jurisdiction if 1 the jurisdiction maintained a test or device on November 1 1964 and 2 less than 50 percent of the jurisdiction s voting age residents either were registered to vote on November 1 1964 or cast a ballot in the November 1964 presidential election 25 317 This formula reached few jurisdictions outside the Deep South To appease legislators who felt that the bill unfairly targeted Southern jurisdictions the bill included a general prohibition on racial discrimination in voting that applied nationwide 44 1352 The bill also included provisions allowing a covered jurisdiction to bail out of coverage by proving in federal court that it had not used a test or device for a discriminatory purpose or with a discriminatory effect during the 5 years preceding its bailout request 43 6 Additionally the bill included a bail in provision under which federal courts could subject discriminatory non covered jurisdictions to remedies contained in the special provisions 45 46 2006 2007 The bill was first considered by the Senate Judiciary Committee whose chair Senator James Eastland D MS opposed the legislation with several other Southern senators on the committee To prevent the bill from dying in committee Mansfield proposed a motion to require the Judiciary Committee to report the bill out of committee by April 9 which the Senate overwhelmingly passed by a vote of 67 to 13 23 150 42 During the committee s consideration of the bill Senator Ted Kennedy D MA led an effort to amend the bill to prohibit poll taxes Although the Twenty fourth Amendment which banned the use of poll taxes in federal elections was ratified a year earlier Johnson s administration and the bill s sponsors did not include a provision in the voting rights bill banning poll taxes in state elections because they feared courts would strike down the legislation as unconstitutional 26 521 31 285 Additionally by excluding poll taxes from the definition of tests or devices the coverage formula did not reach Texas or Arkansas mitigating opposition from those two states influential congressional delegations 26 521 Nonetheless with the support of liberal committee members Kennedy s amendment to prohibit poll taxes passed by a 9 4 vote In response Dirksen offered an amendment that exempted from the coverage formula any state that had at least 60 percent of its eligible residents registered to vote or that had a voter turnout that surpassed the national average in the preceding presidential election This amendment which effectively exempted all states from coverage except Mississippi passed during a committee meeting in which three liberal members were absent Dirksen offered to drop the amendment if the poll tax ban were removed Ultimately the bill was reported out of committee on April 9 by a 12 4 vote without a recommendation 23 152 153 On April 22 the full Senate started debating the bill Dirksen spoke first on the bill s behalf saying that legislation is needed if the unequivocal mandate of the Fifteenth Amendment is to be enforced and made effective and if the Declaration of Independence is to be made truly meaningful 23 154 Senator Strom Thurmond R SC retorted that the bill would lead to despotism and tyranny and Senator Sam Ervin D NC argued that the bill was unconstitutional because it deprived states of their right under Article I Section 2 of the Constitution to establish voter qualifications and because the bill s special provisions targeted only certain jurisdictions On May 6 Ervin offered an amendment to abolish the coverage formula s automatic trigger and instead allow federal judges to appoint federal examiners to administer voter registration This amendment overwhelmingly failed with 42 Democrats and 22 Republicans voting against it 23 154 156 After lengthy debate Ted Kennedy s amendment to prohibit poll taxes also failed 49 45 on May 11 42 However the Senate agreed to include a provision authorizing the attorney general to sue any jurisdiction covered or non covered to challenge its use of poll taxes 31 156 157 43 2 An amendment offered by Senator Robert F Kennedy D NY to enfranchise English illiterate citizens who had attained at least a sixth grade education in a non English speaking school also passed by 48 19 Southern legislators offered a series of amendments to weaken the bill all of which failed 23 159 On May 25 the Senate voted for cloture by a 70 30 vote thus overcoming the threat of filibuster and limiting further debate on the bill 47 On May 26 the Senate passed the bill by a 77 19 vote Democrats 47 16 Republicans 30 2 only senators representing Southern states voted against it 23 161 48 House of Representatives Edit Remarks on the Signing of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 source source source source source source source source source source Statement by United States President Johnson on August 6 1965 about the Voting Rights Act of 1965 Remarks on the Signing of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 source source Audio only Problems playing these files See media help Emanuel Celler D NY Chair of the House Judiciary Committee introduced the Voting Rights Act in the House of Representatives on March 19 1965 as H R 6400 42 The House Judiciary Committee was the first committee to consider the bill The committee s ranking Republican William McCulloch R OH generally supported expanding voting rights but he opposed both the poll tax ban and the coverage formula and he led opposition to the bill in committee The committee eventually approved the bill on May 12 but it did not file its committee report until June 1 23 162 The bill included two amendments from subcommittee a penalty for private persons who interfered with the right to vote and a prohibition of all poll taxes The poll tax prohibition gained Speaker of the House John McCormack s support The bill was next considered by the Rules Committee whose chair Howard W Smith D VA opposed the bill and delayed its consideration until June 24 when Celler initiated proceedings to have the bill discharged from committee 42 Under pressure from the bill s proponents Smith allowed the bill to be released a week later and the full House started debating the bill on July 6 23 163 To defeat the Voting Rights Act McCulloch introduced an alternative bill H R 7896 It would have allowed the attorney general to appoint federal registrars after receiving 25 serious complaints of discrimination against a jurisdiction and it would have imposed a nationwide ban on literacy tests for persons who could prove they attained a sixth grade education McCulloch s bill was co sponsored by House minority leader Gerald Ford R MI and supported by Southern Democrats as an alternative to the Voting Rights Act 23 162 164 The Johnson administration viewed H R 7896 as a serious threat to passing the Voting Rights Act However support for H R 7896 dissipated after William M Tuck D VA publicly said he preferred H R 7896 because the Voting Rights Act would legitimately ensure that African Americans could vote His statement alienated most supporters of H R 7896 and the bill failed on the House floor by a 171 248 vote on July 9 49 Later that night the House passed the Voting Rights Act by a 333 85 vote Democrats 221 61 Republicans 112 24 23 163 165 42 50 Conference committee Edit The chambers appointed a conference committee to resolve differences between the House and Senate versions of the bill A major contention concerned the poll tax provisions the Senate version allowed the attorney general to sue states that used poll taxes to discriminate while the House version outright banned all poll taxes Initially the committee members were stalemated To help broker a compromise Attorney General Katzenbach drafted legislative language explicitly asserting that poll taxes were unconstitutional and instructed the Department of Justice to sue the states that maintained poll taxes To assuage concerns of liberal committee members that this provision was not strong enough Katzenbach enlisted the help of Martin Luther King Jr who gave his support to the compromise King s endorsement ended the stalemate and on July 29 the conference committee reported its version out of committee 23 166 167 The House approved this conference report version of the bill on August 3 by a 328 74 vote Democrats 217 54 Republicans 111 20 51 and the Senate passed it on August 4 by a 79 18 vote Democrats 49 17 Republicans 30 1 23 167 52 53 On August 6 President Johnson signed the Act into law with King Rosa Parks John Lewis and other civil rights leaders in attendance at the signing ceremony 23 168 Amendments Edit Main article Amendments to the Voting Rights Act of 1965 United States President George W Bush signs amendments to the Act in July 2006 Congress enacted major amendments to the Act in 1970 1975 1982 1992 and 2006 Each amendment coincided with an impending expiration of some or all of the Act s special provisions Originally set to expire by 1970 Congress repeatedly reauthorized the special provisions in recognition of continuing voting discrimination 23 209 210 43 6 8 Congress extended the coverage formula and special provisions tied to it such as the Section 5 preclearance requirement for five years in 1970 seven years in 1975 and 25 years in both 1982 and 2006 In 1970 and 1975 Congress also expanded the reach of the coverage formula by supplementing it with new 1968 and 1972 trigger dates Coverage was further enlarged in 1975 when Congress expanded the meaning of tests or devices to encompass any jurisdiction that provided English only election information such as ballots if the jurisdiction had a single language minority group that constituted more than five percent of the jurisdiction s voting age citizens These expansions brought numerous jurisdictions into coverage including many outside of the South 54 To ease the burdens of the reauthorized special provisions Congress liberalized the bailout procedure in 1982 by allowing jurisdictions to escape coverage by complying with the Act and affirmatively acting to expand minority political participation 26 523 In addition to reauthorizing the original special provisions and expanding coverage Congress amended and added several other provisions to the Act For instance Congress expanded the original ban on tests or devices to apply nationwide in 1970 and in 1975 Congress made the ban permanent 43 6 9 Separately in 1975 Congress expanded the Act s scope to protect language minorities from voting discrimination Congress defined language minority to mean persons who are American Indian Asian American Alaskan Natives or of Spanish heritage 55 Congress amended various provisions such as the preclearance requirement and Section 2 s general prohibition of discriminatory voting laws to prohibit discrimination against language minorities 56 199 Congress also enacted a bilingual election requirement in Section 203 which requires election officials in certain jurisdictions with large numbers of English illiterate language minorities to provide ballots and voting information in the language of the language minority group Originally set to expire after 10 years Congress reauthorized Section 203 in 1982 for seven years expanded and reauthorized it in 1992 for 15 years and reauthorized it in 2006 for 25 years 57 19 21 25 49 The bilingual election requirements have remained controversial with proponents arguing that bilingual assistance is necessary to enable recently naturalized citizens to vote and opponents arguing that the bilingual election requirements constitute costly unfunded mandates 57 26 Several of the amendments responded to judicial rulings with which Congress disagreed In 1982 Congress amended the Act to overturn the Supreme Court case Mobile v Bolden 1980 which held that the general prohibition of voting discrimination prescribed in Section 2 prohibited only purposeful discrimination Congress responded by expanding Section 2 to explicitly ban any voting practice that had a discriminatory effect regardless of whether the practice was enacted or operated for a discriminatory purpose The creation of this results test shifted the majority of vote dilution litigation brought under the Act from preclearance lawsuits to Section 2 lawsuits 26 644 645 In 2006 Congress amended the Act to overturn two Supreme Court cases Reno v Bossier Parish School Board 2000 58 which interpreted the Section 5 preclearance requirement to prohibit only voting changes that were enacted or maintained for a retrogressive discriminatory purpose instead of any discriminatory purpose and Georgia v Ashcroft 2003 59 which established a broader test for determining whether a redistricting plan had an impermissible effect under Section 5 than assessing only whether a minority group could elect its preferred candidates 60 207 208 Since the Supreme Court struck down the coverage formula as unconstitutional in Shelby County v Holder 2013 several bills have been introduced in Congress to create a new coverage formula and amend various other provisions none of these bills have passed 61 62 63 Provisions Edit The first page of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 The act contains two types of provisions general provisions which apply nationwide and special provisions which apply to only certain states and local governments 64 1 The Voting Rights Act was aimed at the subtle as well as the obvious state regulations which have the effect of denying citizens their right to vote because of their race Moreover compatible with the decisions of this Court the Act gives a broad interpretation to the right to vote recognizing that voting includes all action necessary to make a vote effective 79 Stat 445 42 U S C 19731 c 1 1969 ed Supp I See Reynolds v Sims 377 U S 533 377 U S 555 1964 65 Most provisions are designed to protect the voting rights of racial and language minorities The term language minority means persons who are American Indian Asian American Alaskan Natives or of Spanish heritage 55 The act s provisions have been colored by numerous judicial interpretations and congressional amendments General provisions Edit General prohibition of discriminatory voting laws Edit Section 2 prohibits any jurisdiction from implementing a voting qualification or prerequisite to voting or standard practice or procedure in a manner which results in a denial or abridgement of the right to vote on account of race color or language minority status 57 37 66 Section 2 of the law contains two separate protections against voter discrimination for laws which in contrast to Section 5 of the law are already implemented 67 68 The first protection is a prohibition of intentional discrimination based on race or color in voting The second protection is a prohibition of election practices that result in the denial or abridgment of the right to vote based on race or color 67 68 69 If the violation of the second protection is intentional then this violation is also a violation of the Fifteenth Amendment 69 The Supreme Court has allowed private plaintiffs to sue to enforce these prohibitions 70 138 71 In Mobile v Bolden 1980 the Supreme Court held that as originally enacted in 1965 Section 2 simply restated the Fifteenth Amendment and thus prohibited only those voting laws that were intentionally enacted or maintained for a discriminatory purpose 72 60 61 73 67 7 74 In 1982 Congress amended Section 2 to create a results test 75 which prohibits any voting law that has a discriminatory effect irrespective of whether the law was intentionally enacted or maintained for a discriminatory purpose 76 77 3 67 7 74 The 1982 amendments stipulated that the results test does not guarantee protected minorities a right to proportional representation 78 In Thornburg v Gingles 1986 the United States Supreme Court explained with respect to the 1982 amendment for section 2 that the essence of a Section 2 claim is that a certain electoral law practice or structure interacts with social and historical conditions to cause an inequality in the opportunities enjoyed by black and white voters to elect their preferred representatives 79 The United States Department of Justice declared that section 2 is not only a permanent and nationwide applying prohibition against discrimination in voting to any voting standard practice or procedure that results in the denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen to vote on account of race color or membership in a language minority group but also a prohibition for state and local officials to adopt or maintain voting laws or procedures that purposefully discriminate on the basis of race color or membership in a language minority group 79 The United States Supreme Court expressed its views regarding Section 2 and its amendment from 1982 in Chisom v Roemer 1991 80 Under the amended statute proof of intent is no longer required to prove a 2 violation Now plaintiffs can prevail under 2 by demonstrating that a challenged election practice has resulted in the denial or abridgement of the right to vote based on color or race Congress not only incorporated the results test in the paragraph that formerly constituted the entire 2 but also designated that paragraph as subsection a and added a new subsection b to make clear that an application of the results test requires an inquiry into the totality of the circumstances Section 2 a adopts a results test thus providing that proof of discriminatory intent is no longer necessary to establish any violation of the section Section 2 b provides guidance about how the results test is to be applied 81 There is a statutory framework to determine whether a jurisdiction s election law violates the general prohibition from Section 2 in its amended form 82 Section 2 prohibits voting practices that result in a denial or abridgment of the right to vote on account of race or color or language minority status and it states that such a result is established if a jurisdiction s political processes are not equally open to members of such a group in that they have less opportunity to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice 52 U S C 10301 Subsection b states in relevant part A violation of subsection a is established if based on the totality of circumstances it is shown that the political processes leading to nomination or election in the State or political subdivision are not equally open to participation by members of a class of citizens protected by subsection a in that its members have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice 83 84 The Office of the Arizona Attorney general stated with respect to the framework to determine whether a jurisdiction s election law violates the general prohibition from Section 2 in its amended form and the reason for the adoption of Section 2 in its amended form To establish a violation of amended Section 2 the plaintiff must prove based on the totality of circumstances that the State s political processes are not equally open to participation by members of a protected class in that its members have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice 10301 b That is the result that amended Section 2 prohibits less opportunity than other members of the electorate viewing the State s political processes as a whole The new language was crafted as a compromise designed to eliminate the need for direct evidence of discriminatory intent which is often difficult to obtain but without embracing an unqualified disparate impact test that would invalidate many legitimate voting procedures S REP NO 97 417 at 28 29 31 32 99 1982 85 84 In Brnovich v Democratic National Committee 2021 the United States Supreme Court introduced the means to review Section 2 challenges 86 87 The slip opinion stated in its Syllabus section in this regard that The Court declines in these cases to announce a test to govern all VRA Section 2 challenges to rules that specify the time place or manner for casting ballots It is sufficient for present purposes to identify certain guideposts that lead to the Court s decision in these cases 88 The Court laid out these guideposts used to evaluate the state regulations in context of Section 2 which included the size of the burden created by the rule the degree which the rule deviates from past practices the size of the racial imbalance and the overall level of opportunity afforded voters in considering all election rules 89 87 When determining whether a jurisdiction s election law violates the general prohibition from Section 2 of the VRA courts have relied on factors enumerated in the Senate Judiciary Committee report associated with the 1982 amendments Senate Factors including 79 The history of official discrimination in the jurisdiction that affects the right to vote The degree to which voting in the jurisdiction is racially polarized The extent of the jurisdiction s use of majority vote requirements unusually large electoral districts prohibitions on bullet voting and other devices that tend to enhance the opportunity for voting discrimination Whether minority candidates are denied access to the jurisdiction s candidate slating processes if any The extent to which the jurisdiction s minorities are discriminated against in socioeconomic areas such as education employment and health Whether overt or subtle racial appeals in campaigns exist The extent to which minority candidates have won elections The degree that elected officials are unresponsive to the concerns of the minority group and Whether the policy justification for the challenged law is tenuous The report indicates not all or a majority of these factors need to exist for an electoral device to result in discrimination and it also indicates that this list is not exhaustive allowing courts to consider additional evidence at their discretion 73 78 344 90 28 29 No right is more precious in a free country than that of having a voice in the election of those who make the laws under which as good citizens we must live Other rights even the most basic are illusory if the right to vote is undermined Our Constitution leaves no room for classification of people in a way that unnecessarily abridges this right Justice Black on the right to vote as the foundation of democracy in Wesberry v Sanders 1964 91 Section 2 prohibits two types of discrimination vote denial in which a person is denied the opportunity to cast a ballot or to have their vote properly counted and vote dilution 92 93 2 6 in which the strength or effectiveness of a person s vote is diminished 94 691 692 Most Section 2 litigation has concerned vote dilution especially claims that a jurisdiction s redistricting plan or use of at large multimember elections prevents minority voters from casting sufficient votes to elect their preferred candidates 94 708 709 An at large election can dilute the votes cast by minority voters by allowing a cohesive majority group to win every legislative seat in the jurisdiction 95 221 Redistricting plans can be gerrymandered to dilute votes cast by minorities by packing high numbers of minority voters into a small number of districts or cracking minority groups by placing small numbers of minority voters into a large number of districts 96 In Thornburg v Gingles 1986 the Supreme Court used the term vote dilution through submergence to describe claims that a jurisdiction s use of an at large multimember election system or gerrymandered redistricting plan diluted minority votes and it established a legal framework for assessing such claims under Section 2 a Under the Gingles test plaintiffs must show the existence of three preconditions The racial or language minority group is sufficiently numerous and compact to form a majority in a single member district The minority group is politically cohesive meaning its members tend to vote similarly and The majority votes sufficiently as a bloc to enable it usually to defeat the minority s preferred candidate 98 50 51 The first precondition is known as the compactness requirement and concerns whether a majority minority district can be created The second and third preconditions are collectively known as the racially polarized voting or racial bloc voting requirement and they concern whether the voting patterns of the different racial groups are different from each other If a plaintiff proves these preconditions exist then the plaintiff must additionally show using the remaining Senate Factors and other evidence that under the totality of the circumstances the jurisdiction s redistricting plan or use of at large or multimember elections diminishes the ability of the minority group to elect candidates of its choice 78 344 345 Subsequent litigation further defined the contours of these vote dilution through submergence claims In Bartlett v Strickland 2009 99 the Supreme Court held that the first Gingles precondition can be satisfied only if a district can be drawn in which the minority group comprises a majority of voting age citizens This means that plaintiffs cannot succeed on a submergence claim in jurisdictions where the size of the minority group despite not being large enough to comprise a majority in a district is large enough for its members to elect their preferred candidates with the help of crossover votes from some members of the majority group 100 101 A2 In contrast the Supreme Court has not addressed whether different protected minority groups can be aggregated to satisfy the Gingles preconditions as a coalition and lower courts have split on the issue b The Supreme Court provided additional guidance on the totality of the circumstances test in Johnson v De Grandy 1994 97 The court emphasized that the existence of the three Gingles preconditions may be insufficient to prove liability for vote dilution through submergence if other factors weigh against such a determination especially in lawsuits challenging redistricting plans In particular the court held that even where the three Gingles preconditions are satisfied a jurisdiction is unlikely to be liable for vote dilution if its redistricting plan contains a number of majority minority districts that is proportional to the minority group s population size The decision thus clarified that Section 2 does not require jurisdictions to maximize the number of majority minority districts 107 The opinion also distinguished the proportionality of majority minority districts which allows minorities to have a proportional opportunity to elect their candidates of choice from the proportionality of election results which Section 2 explicitly does not guarantee to minorities 97 1013 1014 An issue regarding the third Gingles precondition remains unresolved In Gingles the Supreme Court split as to whether plaintiffs must prove that the majority racial group votes as a bloc specifically because its members are motivated to vote based on racial considerations and not other considerations that may overlap with race such as party affiliation A plurality of justices said that requiring such proof would violate Congress s intent to make Section 2 a results test but Justice White maintained that the proof was necessary to show that an electoral scheme results in racial discrimination 108 555 557 Since Gingles lower courts have split on the issue c The right to vote freely for the candidate of one s choice is of the essence of a democratic society and any restrictions on that right strike at the heart of representative government And the right of suffrage can be denied by a debasement or dilution of the weight of a citizen s vote just as effectively as by wholly prohibiting the free exercise of the franchise Undoubtedly the right of suffrage is a fundamental matter in a free and democratic society Especially since the right to exercise the franchise in a free and unimpaired manner is preservative of other basic civil and political rights any alleged infringement of the right of citizens to vote must be carefully and meticulously scrutinized Chief Justice Earl Warren on the right to vote as the foundation of democracy in Reynolds v Sims 1964 112 Although most Section 2 litigation has involved claims of vote dilution through submergence 94 708 709 courts also have addressed other types of vote dilution under this provision In Holder v Hall 1994 113 the Supreme Court held that claims that minority votes are diluted by the small size of a governing body such as a one person county commission may not be brought under Section 2 A plurality of the court reasoned that no uniform non dilutive benchmark size for a governing body exists making relief under Section 2 impossible 114 Another type of vote dilution may result from a jurisdiction s requirement that a candidate be elected by a majority vote A majority vote requirement may cause a minority group s candidate of choice who would have won the election with a simple plurality of votes to lose after a majority of voters unite behind another candidate in a runoff election The Supreme Court has not addressed whether such claims may be brought under Section 2 and lower courts have reached different conclusions on the issue d In addition to claims of vote dilution courts have considered vote denial claims brought under Section 2 The Supreme Court in Richardson v Ramirez 1974 117 held that felony disenfranchisement laws cannot violate Section 2 because among other reasons Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment permits such laws 26 756 757 A federal district court in Mississippi held that a dual registration system that requires a person to register to vote separately for state elections and local elections may violate Section 2 if the system has a racially disparate impact in light of the Senate Factors 26 754 118 Starting in 2013 lower federal courts began to consider various challenges to voter ID laws brought under Section 2 119 Specific prohibitions Edit The act contains several specific prohibitions on conduct that may interfere with a person s ability to cast an effective vote One of these prohibitions is prescribed in Section 201 which prohibits any jurisdiction from requiring a person to comply with any test or device to register to vote or cast a ballot The term test or device is defined as literacy tests educational or knowledge requirements proof of good moral character and requirements that a person be vouched for when voting 120 Before the Act s enactment these devices were the primary tools used by jurisdictions to prevent racial minorities from voting 121 Originally the Act suspended tests or devices temporarily in jurisdictions covered by the Section 4 b coverage formula but Congress subsequently expanded the prohibition to the entire country and made it permanent 43 6 9 Relatedly Section 202 prohibits jurisdictions from imposing any durational residency requirement that requires persons to have lived in the jurisdiction for more than 30 days before being eligible to vote in a presidential election 122 353 Several further protections for voters are contained in Section 11 Section 11 a prohibits any person acting under color of law from refusing or failing to allow a qualified person to vote or to count a qualified voter s ballot Similarly Section 11 b prohibits any person from intimidating harassing or coercing another person for voting or attempting to vote 57 Two provisions in Section 11 address voter fraud Section 11 c prohibits people from knowingly submitting a false voter registration application to vote in a federal election and Section 11 e prohibits voting twice in a federal election 123 124 360 Finally under Section 208 a jurisdiction may not prevent anyone who is English illiterate or has a disability from being accompanied into the ballot box by an assistant of the person s choice The only exceptions are that the assistant may not be an agent of the person s employer or union 56 221 Bail in Edit Section 3 c contains a bail in or pocket trigger process by which jurisdictions that fall outside the coverage formula of Section 4 b may become subject to preclearance Under this provision if a jurisdiction has racially discriminated against voters in violation of the Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendments a court may order the jurisdiction to have future changes to its election laws preapproved by the federal government 46 2006 2007 Because courts have interpreted the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to prohibit only intentional discrimination a court may bail in a jurisdiction only if the plaintiff proves that the jurisdiction enacted or operated a voting practice to purposely discriminate 46 2009 Section 3 c contains its own preclearance language and differs from Section 5 preclearance in several ways Unlike Section 5 preclearance which applies to a covered jurisdiction until such time as the jurisdiction may bail out of coverage under Section 4 a bailed in jurisdictions remain subject to preclearance for as long as the court orders Moreover the court may require the jurisdiction to preclear only particular types of voting changes For example the bail in of New Mexico in 1984 applied for 10 years and required preclearance of only redistricting plans This differs from Section 5 preclearance which requires a covered jurisdiction to preclear all of its voting changes 46 2009 2010 125 During the Act s early history Section 3 c was little used no jurisdictions were bailed in until 1975 Between 1975 and 2013 18 jurisdictions were bailed in including 16 local governments and the states of Arkansas and New Mexico 126 1a 2a Although the Supreme Court held the Section 4 b coverage formula unconstitutional in Shelby County v Holder 2013 it did not hold Section 3 c unconstitutional Therefore jurisdictions may continue to be bailed in and subjected to Section 3 c preclearance 13 127 In the months following Shelby County courts began to consider requests by the attorney general and other plaintiffs to bail in the states of Texas and North Carolina 128 and in January 2014 a federal court bailed in Evergreen Alabama 129 A more narrow bail in process pertaining to federal observer certification is prescribed in Section 3 a Under this provision a federal court may certify a non covered jurisdiction to receive federal observers if the court determines that the jurisdiction violated the voting rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendments Jurisdictions certified to receive federal observers under Section 3 a are not subject to preclearance 130 236 237 Special provisions Edit See also List of jurisdictions subject to the special provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 Coverage formula Edit States and counties encompassed by the Act s coverage formula in January 2008 excluding bailed out jurisdictions Several counties subsequently bailed out 54 but the majority of the map accurately depicts covered jurisdictions before the Supreme Court s decision in Shelby County v Holder 2013 which declared the coverage formula unconstitutional Section 4 b contains a coverage formula that determines which states and local governments may be subjected to the Act s other special provisions except for the Section 203 c bilingual election requirements which fall under a different formula Congress intended for the coverage formula to encompass the most pervasively discriminatory jurisdictions A jurisdiction is covered by the formula if As of November 1 1964 1968 or 1972 the jurisdiction used a test or device to restrict the opportunity to register and vote and Less than half of the jurisdiction s eligible citizens were registered to vote on November 1 1964 1968 or 1972 or less than half of eligible citizens voted in the presidential election of November 1964 1968 or 1972 As originally enacted the coverage formula contained only November 1964 triggering dates subsequent revisions to the law supplemented it with the additional triggering dates of November 1968 and November 1972 which brought more jurisdictions into coverage 54 For purposes of the coverage formula the term test or device includes the same four devices prohibited nationally by Section 201 literacy tests educational or knowledge requirements proof of good moral character and requirements that a person be vouched for when voting and one further device defined in Section 4 f 3 in jurisdictions where more than five percent of the citizen voting age population are members of a single language minority group any practice or requirement by which registration or election materials are provided only in English The types of jurisdictions that the coverage formula applies to include states and political subdivisions of states 56 207 208 Section 14 c 2 defines political subdivision to mean any county parish or other subdivision of a State which conducts registration for voting 131 As Congress added new triggering dates to the coverage formula new jurisdictions were brought into coverage The 1965 coverage formula included the whole of Alabama Alaska Georgia Louisiana Mississippi South Carolina and Virginia and some subdivisions mostly counties in Arizona Hawaii Idaho and North Carolina 54 The 1968 coverage resulted in the partial coverage of Alaska Arizona California Connecticut Idaho Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire New York and Wyoming Connecticut Idaho Maine Massachusetts and Wyoming filed successful bailout lawsuits as also provided by section 4 54 The 1972 coverage covered the whole of Alaska Arizona and Texas and parts of California Florida Michigan New York North Carolina and South Dakota 54 The special provisions of the Act were initially due to expire in 1970 and Congress renewed them for another five years In 1975 the Act s special provisions were extended for another seven years In 1982 the coverage formula was extended again this time for 25 years but no changes were made to the coverage formula and in 2006 the coverage formula was again extended for 25 years 54 Throughout its history the coverage formula remained controversial because it singled out certain jurisdictions for scrutiny most of which were in the Deep South In Shelby County v Holder 2013 the Supreme Court declared the coverage formula unconstitutional because the criteria used were outdated and thus violated principles of equal state sovereignty and federalism 13 132 133 The other special provisions that are dependent on the coverage formula such as the Section 5 preclearance requirement remain valid law However without a valid coverage formula these provisions are unenforceable 14 134 Preclearance requirement Edit Section 5 135 requires that covered jurisdictions receive federal approval known as preclearance before implementing changes to their election laws A covered jurisdiction has the burden of proving that the change does not have the purpose or effect of discriminating on the basis of race or language minority status if the jurisdiction fails to meet this burden the federal government will deny preclearance and the jurisdiction s change will not go into effect The Supreme Court broadly interpreted Section 5 s scope in Allen v State Board of Election 1969 136 holding that any change in a jurisdiction s voting practices even if minor must be submitted for preclearance 137 The court also held that if a jurisdiction fails to have its voting change precleared private plaintiffs may sue the jurisdiction in the plaintiff s local district court before a three judge panel e In these Section 5 enforcement actions a court considers whether the jurisdiction made a covered voting change and if so whether the change had been precleared If the jurisdiction improperly failed to obtain preclearance the court will order the jurisdiction to obtain preclearance before implementing the change However the court may not consider the merits of whether the change should be approved 12 70 128 129 136 556 139 23 Jurisdictions may seek preclearance through either an administrative preclearance process or a judicial preclearance process If a jurisdiction seeks administrative preclearance the attorney general will consider whether the proposed change has a discriminatory purpose or effect After the jurisdiction submits the proposed change the attorney general has 60 days to interpose an objection to it The 60 day period may be extended an additional 60 days if the jurisdiction later submits additional information If the attorney general interposes an objection then the change is not precleared and may not be implemented 140 90 92 The attorney general s decision is not subject to judicial review 141 but if the attorney general interposes an objection the jurisdiction may independently seek judicial preclearance and the court may disregard the attorney general s objection at its discretion 26 559 If a jurisdiction seeks judicial preclearance it must file a declaratory judgment action against the attorney general in the U S District Court for D C A three judge panel will consider whether the voting change has a discriminatory purpose or effect and the losing party may appeal directly to the Supreme Court 142 Private parties may intervene in judicial preclearance lawsuits 59 476 477 140 90 In several cases the Supreme Court has addressed the meaning of discriminatory effect and discriminatory purpose for Section 5 purposes In Beer v United States 1976 143 the court held that for a voting change to have a prohibited discriminatory effect it must result in retrogression backsliding Under this standard a voting change that causes discrimination but does not result in more discrimination than before the change was made cannot be denied preclearance for having a discriminatory effect 144 283 284 For example replacing a poll tax with an equally expensive voter registration fee is not a retrogressive change because it causes equal discrimination not more 145 695 Relying on the Senate report for the Act the court reasoned that the retrogression standard was the correct interpretation of the term discriminatory effect because Section 5 s purpose is to insure that the gains thus far achieved in minority political participation shall not be destroyed through new discriminatory procedures 143 140 141 The retrogression standard applies irrespective of whether the voting change allegedly causes vote denial or vote dilution 144 311 In 2003 the Supreme Court held in Georgia v Ashcroft 59 that courts should not determine that a new redistricting plan has a retrogressive effect solely because the plan decreases the number of minority majority districts The court emphasized that judges should analyze various other factors under the totality of the circumstances such as whether the redistricting plan increases the number of influence districts in which a minority group is large enough to influence but not decide election outcomes In 2006 Congress overturned this decision by amending Section 5 to explicitly state that diminishing the ability of a protected minority to elect their preferred candidates of choice denies or abridges the right to vote within the meaning of Section 5 146 Uncertainty remains as to what this language precisely means and how courts may interpret it 26 551 552 916 Before 2000 the discriminatory purpose prong of Section 5 was understood to mean any discriminatory purpose which is the same standard used to determine whether discrimination is unconstitutional In Reno v Bossier Parish Bossier Parish II 2000 58 the Supreme Court extended the retrogression standard holding that for a voting change to have a discriminatory purpose under Section 5 the change must have been implemented for a retrogressive purpose Therefore a voting change intended to discriminate against a protected minority was permissible under Section 5 so long as the change was not intended to increase existing discrimination 144 277 278 This change significantly reduced the number of instances in which preclearance was denied based on discriminatory purpose In 2006 Congress overturned Bossier Parish II by amending Section 5 to explicitly define purpose to mean any discriminatory purpose 60 199 200 207 147 Federal examiners and observers Edit Until the 2006 amendments to the Act 57 50 Section 6 allowed the appointment of federal examiners to oversee certain jurisdictions voter registration functions Federal examiners could be assigned to a covered jurisdiction if the attorney general certified that The Department of Justice received 20 or more meritorious complaints that the covered jurisdiction denied its residents the right to vote based on race or language minority status or The assignment of federal examiners was otherwise necessary to enforce the voting rights guaranteed by the Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendments 130 235 236 Federal examiners had the authority to register voters examine voter registration applications and maintain voter rolls 130 237 The goal of the federal examiner provision was to prevent jurisdictions from denying protected minorities the right to vote by engaging in discriminatory behavior in the voter registration process such as refusing to register qualified applicants purging qualified voters from the voter rolls and limiting the hours during which persons could register Federal examiners were used extensively in the years following the Act s enactment but their importance waned over time 1983 was the last year that a federal examiner registered a person to vote In 2006 Congress repealed the provision 130 238 239 Under the Act s original framework in any jurisdiction certified for federal examiners the attorney general could additionally require the appointment of federal observers By 2006 the federal examiner provision was used solely as a means to appoint federal observers 130 239 When Congress repealed the federal examiner provision in 2006 Congress amended Section 8 to allow for the assignment of federal observers to jurisdictions that satisfied the same certification criteria that had been used to appoint federal examiners 57 50 Federal observers are tasked with observing poll worker and voter conduct at polling places during an election and observing election officials tabulate the ballots 130 248 The goal of the federal observer provision is to facilitate minority voter participation by deterring and documenting instances of discriminatory conduct in the election process such as election officials denying qualified minority persons the right to cast a ballot intimidation or harassment of voters on election day or improper vote counting 130 231 235 Discriminatory conduct that federal observers document may also serve as evidence in subsequent enforcement lawsuits 130 233 Between 1965 and the Supreme Court s 2013 decision in Shelby County v Holder to strike down the coverage formula the attorney general certified 153 local governments across 11 states 148 Because of time and resource constraints federal observers are not assigned to every certified jurisdiction for every election 130 230 Separate provisions allow for a certified jurisdiction to bail out of its certification 148 Bailout Edit Under Section 4 a a covered jurisdiction may seek exemption from coverage through a process called bailout 54 To achieve an exemption a covered jurisdiction must obtain a declaratory judgment from a three judge panel of the District Court for D C that the jurisdiction is eligible to bail out 12 54 As originally enacted a covered jurisdiction was eligible to bail out if it had not used a test or device with a discriminatory purpose or effect during the 5 years preceding its bailout request 43 22 33 34 Therefore a jurisdiction that requested to bail out in 1967 would have needed to prove that it had not misused a test or device since at least 1962 Until 1970 this effectively required a covered jurisdiction to prove that it had not misused a test or device since before the Act was enacted five years earlier in 1965 43 6 making it impossible for many covered jurisdictions to bail out 43 27 However Section 4 a also prohibited covered jurisdictions from using tests or devices in any manner discriminatory or otherwise hence under the original act a covered jurisdiction would become eligible for bailout in 1970 by simply complying with this requirement But in the course of amending the Act in 1970 and 1975 to extend the special provisions Congress also extended the period of time that a covered jurisdiction must not have misused a test or device to 10 years and then to 17 years respectively 43 7 9 These extensions continued the effect of requiring jurisdictions to prove that they had not misused a test or device since before the Act s enactment in 1965 In 1982 Congress amended Section 4 a to make bailout easier to achieve in two ways First Congress provided that if a state is covered local governments in that state may bail out even if the state is ineligible to bail out 54 Second Congress liberalized the eligibility criteria by replacing the 17 year requirement with a new standard allowing a covered jurisdiction to bail out by proving that in the 10 years preceding its bailout request The jurisdiction did not use a test or device with a discriminatory purpose or effect No court determined that the jurisdiction denied or abridged the right to vote based on racial or language minority status The jurisdiction complied with the preclearance requirement The federal government did not assign federal examiners to the jurisdiction The jurisdiction abolished discriminatory election practices and The jurisdiction took affirmative steps to eliminate voter intimidation and expand voting opportunities for protected minorities Additionally Congress required jurisdictions seeking bailout to produce evidence of minority registration and voting rates including how these rates have changed over time and in comparison to the registration and voting rates of the majority If the court determines that the covered jurisdiction is eligible for bailout it will enter a declaratory judgment in the jurisdiction s favor The court will retain jurisdiction for the following 10 years and may order the jurisdiction back into coverage if the jurisdiction subsequently engages in voting discrimination 43 54 57 22 23 149 The 1982 amendment to the bailout eligibility standard went into effect on August 5 1984 54 Between that date and 2013 196 jurisdictions bailed out of coverage through 38 bailout actions in each instance the attorney general consented to the bailout request 126 54 Between that date and 2009 all jurisdictions that bailed out were located in Virginia 54 In 2009 a municipal utility jurisdiction in Texas bailed out after the Supreme Court s opinion in Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No 1 v Holder 2009 150 which held that local governments that do not register voters have the ability to bail out 151 After this ruling jurisdictions succeeded in at least 20 bailout actions before the Supreme Court held in Shelby County v Holder 2013 that the coverage formula was unconstitutional 126 54 Separate provisions allow a covered jurisdiction that has been certified to receive federal observers to bail out of its certification alone Under Section 13 the attorney general may terminate the certification of a jurisdiction if 1 more than 50 percent of the jurisdiction s minority voting age population is registered to vote and 2 there is no longer reasonable cause to believe that residents may experience voting discrimination Alternatively the District Court for D C may order the certification terminated 130 237 239 148 Bilingual election requirements Edit Two provisions require certain jurisdictions to provide election materials to voters in multiple languages Section 4 f 4 and Section 203 c A jurisdiction covered by either provision must provide all materials related to an election such as voter registration materials ballots notices and instructions in the language of any applicable language minority group residing in the jurisdiction 56 209 Language minority groups protected by these provisions include Asian Americans Hispanics Native Americans and Native Alaskans 152 Congress enacted the provisions to break down language barriers and combat pervasive language discrimination against the protected groups 56 200 209 Section 4 f 4 applies to any jurisdiction encompassed by the Section 4 b coverage formula where more than five percent of the citizen voting age population are members of a single language minority group Section 203 c contains a formula that is separate from the Section 4 b coverage formula and therefore jurisdictions covered solely by 203 c are not subject to the Act s other special provisions such as preclearance The Section 203 c formula encompasses jurisdictions where the following conditions exist A single language minority is present that has an English illiteracy rate higher than the national average andEither The number of limited English proficient members of the language minority group is at least 10 000 voting age citizens or large enough to comprise at least five percent of the jurisdiction s voting age citizen population orThe jurisdiction is a political subdivision that contains an Indian reservation and more than five percent of the jurisdiction s American Indian or Alaska Native voting age citizens are members of a single language minority and are limited English proficient 56 223 224 Section 203 b defines limited English proficient as being unable to speak or understand English adequately enough to participate in the electoral process 56 223 Determinations as to which jurisdictions satisfy the Section 203 c criteria occur once a decade following completion of the decennial census at these times new jurisdictions may come into coverage while others may have their coverage terminated Additionally under Section 203 d a jurisdiction may bail out of Section 203 c coverage by proving in federal court that no language minority group within the jurisdiction has an English illiteracy rate that is higher than the national illiteracy rate 56 226 After the 2010 census 150 jurisdictions across 25 states were covered under Section 203 c including statewide coverage of California Texas and Florida 153 Impact Edit Final page of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 signed by United States President Lyndon B Johnson President of the Senate Hubert Humphrey and Speaker of the House John McCormack After its enactment in 1965 the law immediately decreased racial discrimination in voting The suspension of literacy tests and the assignments of federal examiners and observers allowed for high numbers of racial minorities to register to vote 94 702 Nearly 250 000 African Americans registered in 1965 one third of whom were registered by federal examiners 154 In covered jurisdictions less than one third 29 3 percent of the African American population was registered in 1965 by 1967 this number increased to more than half 52 1 percent 94 702 and a majority of African American residents became registered to vote in 9 of the 13 Southern states 154 Similar increases were seen in the number of African Americans elected to office between 1965 and 1985 African Americans elected as state legislators in the 11 former Confederate states increased from 3 to 176 155 112 Nationwide the number of African American elected officials increased from 1 469 in 1970 to 4 912 in 1980 121 919 By 2011 the number was approximately 10 500 156 Similarly registration rates for language minority groups increased after Congress enacted the bilingual election requirements in 1975 and amended them in 1992 In 1973 the percent of Hispanics registered to vote was 34 9 percent by 2006 that amount nearly doubled The number of Asian Americans registered to vote in 1996 increased 58 percent by 2006 56 233 235 After the Act s initial success in combating tactics designed to deny minorities access to the polls the Act became predominately used as a tool to challenge racial vote dilution 94 691 Starting in the 1970s the attorney general commonly raised Section 5 objections to voting changes that decreased the effectiveness of racial minorities votes including discriminatory annexations redistricting plans and election methods such as at large election systems runoff election requirements and prohibitions on bullet voting 140 105 106 In total 81 percent 2 541 of preclearance objections made between 1965 and 2006 were based on vote dilution 140 102 Claims brought under Section 2 have also predominately concerned vote dilution 94 708 709 Between the 1982 creation of the Section 2 results test and 2006 at least 331 Section 2 lawsuits resulted in published judicial opinions In the 1980s 60 percent of Section 2 lawsuits challenged at large election systems in the 1990s 37 2 percent challenged at large election systems and 38 5 percent challenged redistricting plans Overall plaintiffs succeeded in 37 2 percent of the 331 lawsuits and they were more likely to succeed in lawsuits brought against covered jurisdictions 157 654 656 By enfranchising racial minorities the Act facilitated a political realignment of the Democratic and Republican parties Between 1890 and 1965 Black disenfranchisement enabled the Democratic Party to dominate Southern politics After Johnson signed the Act into law newly enfranchised Black voters began to push the Democratic Party to the left throughout the South this in turn pushed Southern white conservatives to switch their support from the Democratic to Republican party 158 290 This trend caused the two parties to ideologically polarize with the Democratic Party becoming more Liberal and the Republican Party becoming more Conservative 158 290 The trends also created competition between the two parties 158 290 which Republicans capitalized on by implementing the Southern strategy 159 Over the subsequent decades the creation of majority minority districts to remedy racial vote dilution claims also contributed to these developments By packing liberal leaning racial minorities into small numbers of majority minority districts large numbers of surrounding districts became more solidly white conservative and Republican While this increased the elected representation of racial minorities as intended it also decreased white Democratic representation and increased the representation of Republicans overall 158 292 By the mid 1990s these trends culminated in a political realignment the Democratic Party and the Republican Party became more ideologically polarized and defined as liberal and conservative parties respectively and both parties came to compete for electoral success in the South 158 294 with the Republican Party controlling most of Southern politics 23 203 Research shows that the Act successfully and massively increased voter turnout and voter registration in particular among African Americans 17 18 The act has also been linked to concrete outcomes such as greater public goods provision such as public education for areas with higher black population shares and more members of Congress who vote for civil rights related legislation 20 21 A 2016 study in the American Journal of Political Science found that members of Congress who represented jurisdictions subject to the preclearance requirement were substantially more supportive of civil rights related legislation than legislators who did not represent covered jurisdictions 20 A 2013 Quarterly Journal of Economics study found that the Act boosted voter turnout and increases in public goods transfers from state governments to localities with higher black population 21 A 2018 study in The Journal of Politics found that Section 5 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act increased black voter registration by 14 19 percentage points white registration by 10 13 percentage points and overall voter turnout by 10 19 percentage points Additional results for Democratic vote share suggest that some of this overall increase in turnout may have come from reactionary whites 17 A 2019 study in the American Economic Journal found that preclearance substantially increased turnout among minorities even as far as to 2012 the year prior to the Supreme Court ruling ending preclearance 18 The study estimates that preclearance led to an increase in minority turnout of 17 percentage points 18 A 2020 study found that the jurisdictions which had previously been covered by preclearance massively increased the rate of voter registration purges after the 2013 United States Supreme Court Shelby County v Holder decision in which the coverage formula in Section 4 b of the VRA that determined which jurisdictions had to presubmit changes in their election policies for federal approval was struck down 15 Another 2020 study found that VRA coverage halved the incidence and the onset of political violence 160 Constitutionality EditVoter eligibility provisions Edit Early in the history of enforcement for the Act the Supreme Court of the United States was rather quick to address both the constitutionality of the Act in its entirety as well as the constitutionality of several provisions relating to voter qualifications and prerequisites to voting During the following year in 1966 two legal cases were adjudicated by the Court regarding the Act On the seventh day of March in the landmark case of South Carolina v Katzenbach 1966 the Supreme Court held that the Voting Rights Act of 1965 is a constitutional method to enforce the Fifteenth Amendment A few months later on the thirteenth day of June the Supreme Court held that section 4 e of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was constitutional in the case of Katzenbach v Morgan 1966 This section prohibits jurisdictions from administering literacy tests to citizens who attain a sixth grade education in an American school in which the predominant language was Spanish such as schools in Puerto Rico 161 Although the Court had earlier held that literacy tests did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment in the case of Lassiter v Northampton County Board of Elections 1959 the Katzenbach Morgan case allowed Congress could enforce Fourteenth Amendment rights such as the right to vote by prohibiting conduct that it deemed to interfere with such rights even if that conduct may not be independently unconstitutional 162 405 406 163 652 656 After Congress created a nationwide ban on all literacy tests and similar devices in 1970 in the case of Oregon v Mitchell 1970 the Supreme Court upheld the ban as being constitutional 122 164 In that case the Court also addressed the constitutionality of various other provisions relating to voter qualifications and prerequisites to voting the Court upheld Section 202 of the 1965 law which prohibits every state and local government from requiring people to live in their borders for longer than 30 days before allowing them to vote in a presidential election Additionally the Court upheld the provision lowering the minimum voting age to 18 years in federal elections but it held that Congress exceeded its power by lowering the voting age to 18 in state elections this precipitated the ratification of the Twenty sixth Amendment the following year which lowered the voting age in all elections to from 21 years to 18 years in age The Court was deeply divided in the Oregon Mitchell case and a majority of the justices did not agree on one rationale for the holding 122 353 164 118 121 Section 2 results test Edit The question of constitutionality regarding section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 which contains a general prohibition on discriminatory voting laws has not been definitively explained by the Supreme Court As amended in 1982 section 2 prohibits any voting practice that has a discriminatory effect irrespective of whether the practice was enacted or is administered for the purpose of discriminating This results test contrasts with the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments both of which directly prohibit only purposeful discrimination Given this disparity whether the Supreme Court would uphold the constitutionality of section 2 as appropriate legislation that was passed to enforce the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments and under what rationale remains unclear 26 758 759 In Mississippi Republican Executive Opinion v Brooks 1984 165 the Supreme Court summarily affirmed without a written opinion a lower court s decision that 1982 amendment to section 2 is constitutional 166 Justice Rehnquist joined by Chief Justice Burger dissented from the opinion They reasoned that the case presented complex constitutional issues that warranted a full hearing When making later decisions the Supreme Court is more likely to disregard a previous judgment if it lacks a written opinion but for lower courts the Supreme Court s unwritten summary affirmances are as binding as are Supreme Court judgments with written opinions Partially due to Brooks the constitutionality of the section 2 results test has since been unanimously upheld by lower courts 26 759 760 The case of Brnovich v Democratic National Committee 2021 evaluated the applicability of section 2 of the 1965 law in the wake of the decision in the case of Shelby County v Holder 2013 The Democratic National Committee asserted a set of Arizona election laws and policies were discriminatory towards Hispanics and Native Americans under section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 While lower courts upheld the election laws an en banc Ninth Circuit reversed the decision and found these laws to be in violation of section 2 of the 1965 law 167 The Arizona law was upheld by the Supreme Court after it introduced the means to review section 2 challenges 86 87 89 Coverage formula and preclearance Edit The Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of the Section 5 preclearance requirement in three cases The first case was South Carolina v Katzenbach 1966 168 which was decided about five months after the Act s enactment The court held that Section 5 constituted a valid use of Congress s power to enforce the Fifteenth Amendment reasoning that exceptional circumstances of pervasive racial discrimination combined with the inadequacy of case by case litigation in ending that discrimination justified the preclearance requirement 168 334 335 169 76 The court also upheld the constitutionality of the 1965 coverage formula saying that it was rational in both practice and theory and that the bailout provision provided adequate relief for jurisdictions that may not deserve coverage 168 330 169 76 77 The Supreme Court again upheld the preclearance requirement in City of Rome v United States 1980 170 The court held that because Congress had explicit constitutional power to enforce the Reconstruction Amendments by appropriate legislation the Act did not violate principles of federalism The court also explicitly upheld the discriminatory effect prong of Section 5 stating that even though the Fifteenth Amendment directly prohibited only intentional discrimination Congress could constitutionally prohibit unintentional discrimination to mitigate the risk that jurisdictions may engage in intentional discrimination Finally the court upheld the 1975 extension of Section 5 because of the record of discrimination that continued to persist in the covered jurisdictions The court further suggested that the temporary nature of the special provisions was relevant to Section 5 s constitutionality 169 77 78 The final case in which the Supreme Court upheld Section 5 was Lopez v Monterey County Lopez II 1999 171 In Lopez II the court reiterated its reasoning in Katzenbach and Rome and it upheld as constitutional the requirement that covered local governments obtain preclearance before implementing voting changes that their parent state required them to implement even if the parent state was not itself a covered jurisdiction 169 78 172 447 The 2006 extension of Section 5 was challenged before the Supreme Court in Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No 1 v Holder 2009 150 The lawsuit was brought by a municipal water district in Texas that elected members to a water board The District wished to move a voting location from a private home to a public school but that change was subject to preclearance because Texas was a covered jurisdiction The District did not register voters and thus it did not appear to qualify as a political subdivision eligible to bail out of coverage Although the court indicated in dicta a non binding part of the court s opinion that Section 5 presented difficult constitutional questions it did not declare Section 5 unconstitutional instead it interpreted the law to allow any covered local government including one that does not register voters to obtain an exemption from preclearance if it meets the bailout requirements 173 174 In a 5 4 decision in Shelby County v Holder 2013 175 the Supreme Court struck down Section 4 b as unconstitutional 13 134 The court reasoned that the coverage formula violates the constitutional principles of equal sovereignty of the states and federalism because its disparate treatment of the states is based on 40 year old facts having no logical relationship to the present day which makes the formula unresponsive to current needs 13 133 The court did not strike down Section 5 but without Section 4 b no jurisdiction may be subject to Section 5 preclearance unless Congress enacts a new coverage formula 14 After the decision several states that were fully or partially covered including Texas Mississippi North Carolina and South Carolina implemented laws that were previously denied preclearance This prompted new legal challenges to these laws under other provisions unaffected by the court s decision such as Section 2 176 189 200 Research has shown that the coverage formula and the requirement of preclearance substantially increased turnout among racial minorities even as far as the year before Shelby County 18 Some jurisdictions that had previously been covered by the coverage formula increased the rate of voter registration purges after Shelby County 177 On 1 July 2021 the Act s preclearance requirements were further weakened at the state and local level following the Brnovich v Democratic National Committee in a 6 3 Supreme Court ruling which held that Section 2 preclearance provisions could not apply to out of precinct voting or ballot collecting 16 11 Racial gerrymandering Edit Main article Gerrymandering in the United States Affirmative racial gerrymandering While Section 2 and Section 5 prohibit jurisdictions from drawing electoral districts that dilute the votes of protected minorities the Supreme Court has held that in some instances the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prevents jurisdictions from drawing district lines to favor protected minorities The court first recognized the justiciability of affirmative racial gerrymandering claims in Shaw v Reno 1993 178 In Miller v Johnson 1995 179 the court explained that a redistricting plan is constitutionally suspect if the jurisdiction used race as the predominant factor in determining how to draw district lines For race to predominate the jurisdiction must prioritize racial considerations over traditional redistricting principles which include compactness contiguity and respect for political subdivisions or communities defined by actual shared interests 179 916 180 621 If a court concludes that racial considerations predominated then the redistricting plan is considered racially gerrymandered and must be subjected to strict scrutiny meaning that the redistricting plan will be upheld as constitutional only if it is narrowly tailored to advance a compelling state interest In Bush v Vera 1996 181 983 a plurality of the Supreme Court assumed that complying with Section 2 or Section 5 constituted compelling interests and lower courts have allowed only these two interests to justify racial gerrymandering 26 877 See also Edit United States portal Law portal Politics portalFederal laws Edit National Voter Registration Act of 1993 NVRA Help America Vote Act HAVA Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act UOCAVA Attempted federal legislation Edit For the People Act 2019 and 2021 John Lewis Voting Rights Act 2019 and 2021 State laws Edit California Voting Rights Act Voting Rights Act of VirginiaMore Edit Voter suppression in the United States Women s suffrage in the United StatesNotes Edit In Gingles the Supreme Court held that the Gingles test applies to claims that an at large election scheme results in vote dilution The court later held in Growe v Emison 507 U S 25 1993 that the Gingles test also applies to claims that a redistricting plan results in vote dilution through the arrangement of single member districts 97 1006 The Courts of Appeals in the Fifth Circuit 102 Eleventh Circuit 103 and Ninth Circuit 104 have either explicitly held that coalition suits are allowed under Section 2 or assumed that such suits are permissible while those in the Sixth Circuit 105 and Seventh Circuit 106 have rejected such suits 26 703 Courts of Appeals in the Second Circuit 109 and Fourth Circuit 110 have held that such proof is not an absolute requirement for liability but is a relevant additional factor under the totality of the circumstances test In contrast the Fifth Circuit has held that such proof is a required component of the third precondition 26 711 712 111 The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that challenges to majority vote requirements under Section 2 are not cognizable 115 while the Eastern District of Arkansas held the opposite 26 752 753 116 The Supreme Court subsequently held that plaintiffs may alternatively bring Section 5 enforcement actions in state courts 26 534 138 References 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b c Fresh Adriane February 23 2018 The Effect of the Voting Rights Act on Enfranchisement Evidence from North Carolina The Journal of Politics 80 2 713 718 doi 10 1086 697592 S2CID 158668168 a b c d e Ang Desmond 2019 Do 40 Year Old Facts Still Matter Long Run Effects of Federal Oversight under the Voting Rights Act American Economic Journal Applied Economics 11 3 1 53 doi 10 1257 app 20170572 ISSN 1945 7782 Shah P R Marschall M J Ruhil A V S 2013 Are We There Yet The Voting Rights Act and Black Representation on City Councils 1981 2006 The Journal of Politics 75 4 993 1008 doi 10 1017 s0022381613000972 hdl 1911 71875 S2CID 62823836 a b c Schuit Sophie Rogowski Jon C December 1 2016 Race Representation and the Voting Rights Act American Journal of Political Science 61 3 513 526 doi 10 1111 ajps 12284 ISSN 1540 5907 a b c Cascio Elizabeth U Washington Ebonya February 1 2014 Valuing the Vote The Redistribution of Voting Rights and State Funds following the Voting Rights Act of 1965 The 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from the original on January 13 2014 Retrieved March 16 2015 Fager Charles July 1985 Selma 1965 The March That Changed the South 2nd ed Boston MA Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 0405 0 The March to Montgomery Civil Rights Movement Archive Baumgartner Neil December 2012 James Reeb Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia Ferris State University Retrieved November 16 2020 Wicker Tom March 15 1965 Johnson Urges Congress at Joint Session to Pass Law Insuring Negro Vote The New York Times Retrieved August 3 2013 South Carolina v Katzenbach 383 U S 301 1966 at 313 and 314 Footnotes omitted Justia US Supreme Court Center March 7 1966 Retrieved January 6 2021 South Carolina v Katzenbach 383 U S 301 1966 at 327 329 Footnotes omitted Justia US Supreme Court Center March 7 1966 Retrieved January 6 2021 Voting Rights Act of 1965 The Dirksen Congressional Center Congresslink Archived from the original on October 30 2014 Retrieved March 26 2015 a b c d e f Voting Rights Act The Association of Centers for the Study of Congress Retrieved May 29 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k Williamson Richard A 1984 The 1982 Amendments to the Voting Rights Act A Statutory Analysis of the Revised Bailout Provisions Washington University Law Review 62 1 Archived from the original on September 21 2013 Retrieved August 29 2013 Boyd Thomas M Markman Stephen J 1983 The 1982 Amendments to the Voting Rights Act A Legislative History Washington and Lee Law Review 40 4 Retrieved August 31 2013 Voting Rights Act of 1965 3 c 52 U S C 10302 c formerly 42 U S C 1973a c a b c d Crum Travis 2010 The Voting Rights Act s Secret Weapon Pocket Trigger Litigation and Dynamic Preclearance The Yale Law Journal 119 Archived from the original on August 30 2013 Retrieved August 27 2013 Senate Vote 67 in 1965 To Invoke Cloture and End Debate on S 1564 the Voting Rights Act of 1965 govtrack us Civic Impulse LLC Retrieved October 14 2013 Senate Vote 78 in 1965 To Pass S 1564 the Voting Rights Act of 1965 govtrack us Civic Impulse LLC Retrieved October 14 2013 House Vote 86 in 1965 To Recommit H R 6400 the 1965 Voting Rights Act with Instructions to Substitute the Text of H R 7896 Prohibiting the Denial to Any Person of the Right to Register or to Vote Because of his Failure to Pay a Poll Tax or Any Other Such Tax for the Language of the Committee Amendment govtrack us Civic Impulse LLC Retrieved October 14 2013 House Vote 87 in 1965 To Pass H R 6400 the Voting Rights Act of 1965 govtrack us Civic Impulse LLC Retrieved October 14 2013 House Vote 107 in 1965 To Agree to Conference Report on S 1564 the Voting Rights Act govtrack us Civic Impulse LLC Retrieved October 14 2013 Senate Vote 178 in 1965 To Agree to Conference Report on S 1564 the Voting Rights Act of 1965 govtrack us Civic Impulse LLC Retrieved October 14 2013 Moholtra Ajay June 1 2008 Rosa Parks Early Life amp Childhood Rosa Park Facts com Retrieved April 1 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act U S Department of Justice Retrieved June 25 2013 a b Voting Rights Act of 1965 14 c 3 52 U S C 10310 c 3 formerly 42 U S C 1973l c 3 a b c d e f g h i Tucker James Thomas 2006 Enfranchising Language Minority Citizens The Bilingual Election Provisions of the Voting Rights Act PDF New York University Journal of Legislation and Public Policy 10 Retrieved January 3 2014 a b c d e f g This article incorporates public domain material from Laney Garrine P The Voting Rights Act of 1965 As Amended Its History and Current Issues PDF Congressional Research Service Retrieved September 15 2017 a b Reno v Bossier Parish School Board 528 U S 320 2000 a b c Georgia v Ashcroft 539 U S 461 2003 a b Persily Nathaniel 2007 The Promise and Pitfalls of the New Voting Rights Act Yale Law Journal 117 2 174 254 doi 10 2307 20455790 JSTOR 20455790 Archived from the original on September 26 2013 Retrieved September 21 2013 Moving Forward on the VRAA NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund Inc Retrieved April 19 2014 H R 885 Voting Rights Amendment Act of 2015 govtrack us Retrieved December 27 2015 Reps Sensenbrenner and Conyers Reintroduce Bipartisan Voting Rights Amendment Act of 2017 Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner Retrieved November 15 2019 Staats Elmer B February 6 1978 Voting Rights Act Enforcement Needs Strengthening Report of the Comptroller General of the United States GGD 78 19 Retrieved October 27 2013 Allen v State Bd of Elections 393 U S 544 1969 at 565 566 Justia US Supreme Court Center March 3 1969 Retrieved December 26 2021 Voting Rights Act of 1965 2 52 U S C 10301 formerly 42 U S C 1973 a b c d Millhiser Ian September 18 2020 Chief Justice Roberts s lifelong crusade against voting rights explained Vox com Vox com Archived from the original on December 19 2020 Retrieved January 3 2021 a b Millhiser Ian October 2 2020 The Supreme Court will hear a case that could destroy what remains of the Voting Rights Act Vox com Vox com Archived from the original on December 16 2020 Retrieved January 3 2021 a b Soronen Lisa October 8 2020 Supreme Court to Decide Significant Voting Case ncsl org The National Conference of State Legislatures Archived from the original on January 3 2021 Retrieved January 3 2021 a b Tokaji Daniel P 2010 Public Rights and Private Rights of Action The Enforcement of Federal Election Laws PDF Indiana Law Review 44 Archived from the original PDF on March 12 2020 Retrieved February 25 2014 Allen v State Bd of Elections 393 U S 544 1969 Mobile v Bolden 446 U S 55 1980 a b One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act U S Department of Justice Retrieved November 17 2013 a b Berman Ari March 1 2021 Voting Rights Republicans Are Trying to Kill What s Left of the Voting Rights Act Mother Jones Archived from the original on March 3 2021 Retrieved March 6 2021 Denniston Lyle August 13 2015 Constitution Check Is another key part of the Voting Rights Act in trouble National Constitution Center Archived from the original on May 8 2020 Retrieved January 11 2021 Mcdonald Laughlin 1985 The Attack on Voting Rights Southern Changes 7 5 Archived from the original on October 14 2016 Retrieved February 26 2017 Voting Rights Enforcement and Reauthorization The Department of Justice s Record of Enforcing the Temporary Voting Rights Act Provisions PDF U S Commission on Civil Rights May 2006 Archived from the original PDF on July 9 2017 Retrieved August 26 2018 a b c Mulroy Steven J 1998 The Way Out A Legal Standard for Imposing Alternative Electoral Systems as Voting Rights Remedies Harvard Civil Rights Civil Liberties Law Review 33 SSRN 1907880 a b c Section 2 Of The Voting Rights Act The United States Department of Justice September 11 2020 Archived from the original on December 9 2020 Retrieved January 3 2021 United States Department of Justice December 7 2020 2020 12 07 Brief 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original on March 2 2021 Retrieved March 6 2021 Paige A Epstein Addressing Minority Vote Dilution Through StateVoting Rights Acts In University of Chicago Public Law amp LegalTheory Working Paper No 47 February 2014 University of Chicago Law School Chicago Unbound Archived from the original on December 11 2019 Retrieved March 6 2021 a b c d e f g Tokaji Daniel P 2006 The New Vote Denial Where Election Reform Meets the Voting Rights Act South Carolina Law Review 57 SSRN 896786 Adams Ross J 1989 Whose Vote Counts Minority Vote Dilution and Election Rights Journal of Urban and Contemporary Law 35 Retrieved March 26 2015 The Role of Section 2 Redistricting amp Vote Dilution Redrawing the Lines NAACP Legal Defense Fund Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved August 4 2015 a b c Johnson v De Grandy 512 U S 997 1994 Thornburg v Gingles 478 U S 30 1986 Bartlett v Strickland 556 U S 1 2009 Roseman Brandon 2009 Equal Opportunities Do Not Always Equate to Equal Representation How Bartlett v Strickland is a Regression in the Face of the Ongoing Civil Rights Movement North Carolina Central Law Review 32 Retrieved April 13 2019 Barnes Robert March 10 2009 Supreme Court Restricts Voting Rights Act s Scope The Washington Post Retrieved April 21 2014 Campos v City of Baytown 840 F 2d 1240 5th Cir cert denied 492 U S 905 1989 Concerned Citizens v Hardee County 906 F 2d 524 11th Cir 1990 Badillo v City of Stockton 956 F 2d 884 9th Cir 1992 Nixon v Kent County 76 F 3d 1381 6th Cir 1996 en banc Frank v Forest County 336 F 3d 570 7th Cir 2003 Gerken Heather K 2001 Understanding the Right to an Undiluted Vote Harvard Law Review 114 6 1663 1743 doi 10 2307 1342651 JSTOR 1342651 Retrieved November 20 2013 Kosterlitz Mary J 1987 Thornburg v Gingles The Supreme Court s New Test for Analyzing Minority Vote Dilution Catholic University Law Review 36 Retrieved April 13 2019 Goosby v Town of Hempstead 180 F 3d 476 2d Cir 1999 Lewis v Alamance County 99 F 3d 600 4th Cir 1996 League 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1105115 a b c Tokaji Daniel P 2006 Intent and Its Alternatives Defending the New Voting Rights Act PDF Alabama Law Review 58 Retrieved January 7 2014 Brewster Henry Dubler Grant Klym Peter 2013 Election Law Violations American Criminal Law Review 50 Retrieved April 13 2019 Subscription required De Oliveira Pedro 2009 Same Day Voter Registration Post Crawford Reform to Address the Growing Burdens on Lower Income Voters Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 16 Retrieved April 13 2019 Subscription required Section 3 of the Voting Rights Act U S Department of Justice Retrieved March 4 2013 a b c Brief for the Federal Respondent Shelby County v Holder 2013 United States Supreme Court Briefs No 12 96 PDF U S Department of Justice Retrieved December 8 2013 GOP Has Tough Choices on Voting Rights Act Yahoo News Associated Press July 4 2013 Retrieved January 8 2014 Schwinn Steven D September 30 2013 Justice Department to Sue North Carolina over Vote Restrictions Law Professor Blogs Network Retrieved January 1 2014 Liptak Adam January 14 2014 Judge Reinstates Some Federal Oversight of Voting Practices for an Alabama City The New York Times Archived from the original on February 24 2021 Retrieved March 2 2014 a b c d e f g h i j Tucker James Thomas 2007 The Power of Observation The Role of Federal Observers Under the Voting Rights Act Michigan Journal of Race and Law 13 Retrieved April 13 2019 Voting Rights Act 14 c 2 52 U S C 10310 c 2 formerly 42 U S C 1973l c 2 Totenberg Nina Supreme Court Weighs Future Of Voting Rights Act National Public Radio National Public Radio Archived from the original on October 8 2020 Retrieved March 13 2021 a b Liptak A June 25 2013 Supreme Court Invalidates Key Part of Voting Rights Act The New York Times Retrieved June 26 2013 a b Von Drehle David June 25 2013 High Court Rolls Back the Voting Rights Act of 1965 Time Retrieved June 25 2013 Voting Rights Act of 1965 5 52 U S C 10304 formerly 42 U S C 1973c a b Allen v State Board of Elections 393 U S 544 1969 What Must Be Submitted Under Section 5 U S Department of Justice Retrieved November 30 2013 Hathorn v Lovorn 457 U S 255 1982 Lopez v Monterey County Lopez I 519 U S 9 1996 a b c d Posner Mark A 2006 The Real Story Behind the Justice Department s Implementation of Section 5 of the VRA Vigorous Enforcement As Intended by Congress Duke Journal of Constitutional Law amp Public Policy 1 1 Retrieved November 30 2013 Morris v Gressette 432 U S 491 1977 Porto L Brian 1998 What Changes in Voting Practices or Procedures Must be Precleared Under 5 of Voting Rights Act of 1965 42 U S C A 1973c American Law Reports Federal 146 a b Beer v United States 425 U S 130 1976 a b c McCrary Peyton Seaman Christopher Valelly Richard 2006 The End of Preclearance As We Knew It How the Supreme Court Transformed Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act Michigan Journal of Race and Law 11 SSRN 1913565 Kousser J Morgan 2008 The Strange Ironic Career of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act 1965 2007 Texas Law Review 86 Archived from the original on December 19 2013 Retrieved November 16 2013 via EBSCOhost Subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Voting Rights Act of 1965 5 b 52 U S C 10304 b formerly 42 U S C 1973c b Voting Rights Act of 1965 5 c 52 U S C 10304 c formerly 42 U S C 1973c c a b c About Federal Observers and Election Monitoring U S Department of Justice Retrieved January 3 2014 Voting Rights Act of 1965 4 a 52 U S C 10303 a 1 F formerly 42 U S C 1973b a 1 F a b Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No 1 v Holder 557 U S 193 2009 Liptak Adam June 23 2009 Justices Let Stand a Central Provision of Voting Rights Act The New York Times Retrieved June 22 2009 Voting Rights Act of 1965 4 f 4 52 U S C 10303 f 4 formerly 42 U S C 1973b f 4 Groves Robert M October 13 2011 Voting Rights Act Amendments of 2006 Determinations Under Section 203 PDF Federal Register 76 198 Archived from the original PDF on January 23 2014 Retrieved February 23 2017 a b One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Voting Rights Act 1965 Document Info Our Documents Retrieved September 8 2013 Grofman Bernard Handley Lisa February 1991 The Impact of the Voting Rights Act on Black Representation in Southern State Legislatures PDF Legislative Studies Quarterly 16 1 111 doi 10 2307 439970 JSTOR 439970 Retrieved January 5 2014 Eilperin Juliet August 22 2013 What s Changed for African Americans Since 1963 By the Numbers The Washington Post Retrieved January 5 2014 Katz Ellen Aisenbrey Margaret Baldwin Anna Cheuse Emma Weisbrodt Anna 2006 Documenting Discrimination in Voting Judicial Findings Under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform 39 SSRN 1029386 a b c d e Pildes Richard H April 2011 Why the Center Does Not Hold The Causes of Hyperpolarized Democracy in America California Law Review 99 SSRN 1646989 Boyd James May 17 1970 Nixon s Southern Strategy It s All in the Charts PDF The New York Times Retrieved August 2 2008 Lacroix Jean April 13 2020 Ballots instead of Bullets The effect of the Voting Rights Act on political violence Working Papers CEB Voting Rights Act of 1965 4 e 52 U S C 10303 e formerly 42 U S C 1973b e Buss William G January 1998 Federalism Separation of Powers and the Demise of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act Iowa Law Review 83 Retrieved January 7 2014 Subscription required Katzenbach v Morgan 384 U S 641 1966 a b Oregon v Mitchell 400 U S 112 1970 Mississippi Republican Executive Opinion v Brooks 469 U S 1002 1984 Kamen Al November 14 1984 Court Backs Voting Plan The Washington Post Retrieved June 30 2017 Chung Andrew February 24 2021 U S Supreme Court set to weigh Republican backed voting restrictions Reuters Archived from the original on February 27 2021 Retrieved February 28 2021 a b c South Carolina v Katzenbach 383 U S 301 1966 a b c d Posner Mark A 2006 Time is Still on Its Side Why Congressional Reauthorization of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act Represents a Congruent and Proportional Response to Our Nation s History of Discrimination in Voting PDF New York University Journal of Legislation and Public Policy 10 Retrieved December 14 2013 City of Rome v United States 446 U S 156 1980 Lopez v Monterey County Lopez II 525 U S 266 1999 Harper Charlotte Marx 2000 Lopez v Monterey County A Remedy Gone Too Far Baylor Law Review 52 Retrieved May 24 2014 Liptak Adam June 22 2009 Justices Retain Oversight by U S on Voting The New York Times Retrieved January 21 2014 Bravin Jess June 23 2009 Supreme Court Avoids Voting Rights Act Fight The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on March 7 2014 Retrieved May 19 2017 Sean Sullivan February 27 2013 Everything You Need to Know about the Supreme Court Voting Rights Act Case The Washington Post Archived from the original on February 28 2013 Retrieved February 27 2013 Wilson McKenzie 2015 Piercing the Umbrella The Dangerous Paradox of Shelby County v Holder Seton Hall Legislative Journal 39 Retrieved April 13 2019 Feder Catalina Miller Michael G 2020 Voter Purges After Shelby American Politics Research 48 6 687 692 doi 10 1177 1532673x20916426 ISSN 1532 673X S2CID 221131969 Shaw v Reno Shaw I 509 U S 630 1993 a b Miller v Johnson 515 U S 900 1995 Ebaugh Nelson 1997 Refining the Racial Gerrymandering Claim Bush v Vera Tulsa Law Journal 33 2 Retrieved December 30 2013 Bush v Vera 517 U S 952 1996 Further reading EditAnsolabehere Stephen Persily Nathaniel Stewart Charles III 2010 Race Region and Vote Choice in the 2008 Election Implications for the Future of the Voting Rights Act Harvard Law Review 123 6 1385 1436 Berman Ari 2015 Give Us the Ballot The Modern Struggle for Voting Rights in America New York NY Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0 3741 5827 9 Bullock Charles S III Ronald Keith Gaddie and Justin J Wert eds 2016 The Rise and Fall of the Voting Rights Act by University of Oklahoma Press 240 pages focus on period between the 2006 revision of the 1965 act and the invalidation of one of its key provisions in Shelby County v Holder 2013 Davidson Chandler 1984 Minority Vote Dilution Washington D C Howard University Press ISBN 978 0 88258 156 9 Davidson Chandler 1994 Quiet Revolution in the South The Impact of the Voting Rights Act 1965 1990 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02108 9 Finley Keith M 2008 Delaying the Dream Southern Senators and the Fight Against Civil Rights 1938 1965 Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 3345 3 Garrow David J 1978 Protest at Selma Martin Luther King Jr and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 02498 2 Lawson Steven F 1976 Black Ballots Voting Rights in the South 1944 1969 New York NY Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 7391 0087 5 Smooth Wendy September 2006 Intersectionality in electoral politics a mess worth making Politics amp Gender 2 3 400 414 doi 10 1017 S1743923X06261087 S2CID 145812097 External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Voting Rights Act of 1965 Voting Rights Act of 1965 PDF details as amended in the GPO Statute Compilations collection Text of original Act and 1970 1975 and 1982 amendments PDF Archived from the original on March 7 2019 Voting Rights Enforcement and Reauthorization An Examination of the Act s Section 5 Preclearance Provision U S Commission on Civil Rights Voting Rights Act Past Present and Future Archived October 9 2008 at the Wayback Machine Justice Talking The Voting Rights Act of 1965 Background and Overview PDF Congressional Research Service The Selma to Montgomery Voting Rights March Shaking the Conscience of the Nation a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places lesson plan Voting Rights Act Evidence of Continued Need Hearing before the Subcommittee on the Constitution of the Committee on the Judiciary House of Representatives One Hundred Ninth Congress Second Session March 8 2006 Vol 1 Vol 2 Vol 3 Vol 4 The Great Society Congress 111 Congressional Record Bound Volume 111 Part 2 May 25 1965 to June 8 1965 Congressional Record Senate May 26 vote roll call p 11752 111 Congressional Record Bound Volume 111 Part 12 July 7 1965 to July 16 1965 Congressional Record House July 9 vote roll call pp 16285 16286 111 Congressional Record Bound Volume 111 Part 14 July 28 1965 to August 9 1965 Congressional Record House August 3 conference report vote roll call p 19201 111 Congressional Record Bound Volume 111 Part 14 July 28 1965 to August 9 1965 Congressional Record Senate August 4 conference report vote roll call p 19378 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Voting Rights Act of 1965 amp oldid 1138873004, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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