Attorney General Eric Holder believes that “Congress needs to act” to protect the right to vote in the wake of the Supreme Court’s ruling last week gutting the Voting Rights Act.
“The Justice Department is eager to work with Congressional leaders of both parties, and with concerned citizens like you, to craft new legislation to fill the void left by the Court’s ruling and address voting rights discrimination,” Holder told Delta Sigma Theta, a sorority founded at Howard University, on Monday. “This is not a partisan issue. It is an issue about the most fundamental of all rights–the right to vote. It is about how we define our democracy.”
On Wednesday, the Senate Judiciary Committee will begin hearings intended to inform the process of drawing up a legislative response to the court’s ruling.
Here is the section of Holder’s speech that addressed voting rights:
Just weeks after this organization was born, the 22 founders of Delta Sigma Theta carried out their first public act–and became the only African-American women’s organization to participate in a historic march for women’s suffrage right here in our nation’s capital. From the beginning, they aligned themselves with a righteous cause that has sparked a century-long commitment to social action.









