Proclaiming Sept. 22 “National Voter Registration Day,” President Barack Obama commemorated the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Voting Rights Act on Thursday by calling on every American to continue to fight for and — most importantly, exercise — their fundamental right to participate in the nation’s democracy.
“There are all kinds of battles we have to fight,” Obama said Thursday in a speech at the White House, “but we miss the forest for the trees if we don’t also recognize that huge chunks of us citizens just give away our power. We’d rather complain than do something about it. We won’t vote, then we’ll talk about the terrible political process that isn’t doing anything.”
“I like grumbling and complaining … I can’t always do it in public,” Obama joked. “But what I know is it doesn’t get anything accomplished.”
Standing alongside Loretta Lynch, the nation’s first female African-American attorney general, and Rep. John Lewis, who helped pave the way for President Lyndon Johnson’s signing of the landmark civil rights law, Obama hailed the era of progress ushered in by the Voting Rights Act.
But “on the ground,” Obama said, “there are still too many ways in which people are discouraged from voting.”
The president reiterated criticisms leveled in a moving op-ed for Medium, published earlier in the day, in which he pointed to state laws that roll back early voting or require potential voters to present certain forms of photo ID as “provisions specifically designed to make it harder for some people to vote.” He also bemoaned the 2013 Supreme Court decision in the case of Shelby County v. Holder, which invalidated a key provision of the Voting Rights Act that required states with a history of racial discrimination to secure “pre-clearance,” or pre-approval, by the federal government before changing their election laws. Since that ruling, numerous states have implemented voting requirements that critics feel disproportionately burden low-income, minority, and younger voters.
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