Congress leaned toward a breakthrough on Thursday, as elder statesmen from both parties agreed on a plan to restore the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Rep. John Lewis, who was beaten during the Selma march for civil rights in 1965, joined Rep. John Conyers, first elected that same year, and Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner, the conservative author of the Patriot Act and a longtime backer of the Voting Rights Act. They offered the first legislative response to the Supreme Court’s decision gutting the law last year.
In June, the court invalidated parts of the Voting Rights Act because the law was not updated for current conditions. Chief Justice Roberts criticized Congress for using “40-year-old data” to patrol modern voter discrimination. That was peculiar logic, since most federal regulations sit on the books without updates. After all, laws aren’t iPhone apps. Their power comes from permanence, not a constant refinement. As Richard Posner, a respected appeals judge, explained in a critique of the ruling, “ordinarily… a federal statute is not invalidated on the ground that it’s dated.”
The upside, however, was that Roberts’ complaint was eminently fixable. If the Justices wanted new data, Congress could just give it to them.
That’s what the new bill does.
While the original law used literacy tests and turnout data from the civil rights era to pick which states required extra supervision to prevent discrimination, the “Voting Rights Amendments Act” uses more recent discrimination.
If a state is found to discriminate against voters five times, over a 15 year period, that conduct “triggers” federal supervision to protect the state’s voters. There is a similar formula for local jurisdictions. Call it “five strikes and you’re in.”
Like the original law, this approach is measured – it only intrudes on local autonomy after democratic rights have been repeatedly violated. By using a more flexible trigger, it also enables federal supervision to go wherever the problem is – rather than focusing primarily on states with a history of segregation. That’s a worthwhile shift, since legislative crackdowns on access to the polls has moved beyond the South and into states like Ohio and Indiana. (Legal commentators, myself included, proposed this kind of “national” trigger as one solution to the Supreme Court case last year.)
The bill also includes a “transparency” section to force more exposure on local voting practices. Since last-minute changes to voting rules can confuse voters or distort outcomes, the bill requires any change within six months of Election Day to be released through “public notice” and publication “on the Internet.”
Professor Rick Hasen, an election law expert, says this “disclosure is an unmitigated good,” and “allows for timely lawsuits if necessary to combat draconian voting changes throughout the country. ”
The bill has a major hole, however, which speaks to the politics at play.
While the Supreme Court has upheld the concept of photo identification requirements to vote, some lower courts have rejected such rules, and the Justice department has also objected to voter ID laws. The bill attempts to exempt Justice department objections to voter ID in its new fomula for patrolling discrimination.
It states that violations based on Justice department objections to voter ID do not count toward the “five strikes” in the formula.
You read that right. There’s an exception for a specific barrier to voting in a voting rights bill. On the other hand, proponents of the bill say its formula will still count any voter ID violations determined by a court, not the Justice department.









