These days, voting is largely uneventful. You show up at the polls, check in, vote, and get your sticker.
Long gone are the days of having to take a literacy test—such as the one used in 1965 Alabama, which was a 68 question civics exam that I doubt most of my political science students could ace. We also no longer have to shell out the equivalent of a day’s wages to cast a vote. And finally, while some of us may experience burdensome lines to vote, we are not in physical danger of violence or intimidation to keep us from polls.
The 1965 Voting Rights Act not only outlawed voter suppression through intimidation, poll taxes, and literacy tests, but it provided the government the teeth to implement these enforcements. The 1965 VRA protected voting rights by not just creating a mechanism to react to the suppression of voting rights but by pro-actively preventing mechanisms that would infringe on an individual’s voting rights.
RELATED: Scholars ask Supreme Court to keep Voting Rights Act
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act is the legislation’s hall monitor. Under this section the most egregious voting rights bullies were put on notice that they’d have to check in and make sure any change in their voting rules didn’t go back to their bullying ways. Most of the Southern states, along with Arizona, Alaska, and a number of counties throughout the nation, met the criteria for needing a little extra vigilance and protection of voting rights.
But, it’s no fun to be monitored and to have to raise your hand and ask permission to do something, such as change a voting protocol. This is exactly the sentiment of one VRA covered jurisdiction, Shelby County, Alabama, and they will be appearing before the Supreme Court next week to argue that the Section 5 hall monitor is no longer needed and that the county has shown good voting rights behavior.
Close to 50 years have gone by since the passage of the Voting Rights Act. In that time we have seen minority registration and voting increase manifold in the absence of voter suppression devices. We have also seen a steady growth of minority elected officials, most notably the election of our first African-American president. At first sight we could say that the protections Section 5 that the VRA provides are outdated and unnecessary, that voter suppression and related negative racial attitudes among whites are a thing of the past. As a result, Section 5 is not needed anymore.
But not so fast…









