Let no one say the Justice Department is indifferent to the future of Americans’ voting rights. Two weeks ago, on the anniversary of the Voting Rights Act becoming law, Attorney General Merrick Garland wrote an op-ed for the Washington Post, urging lawmakers to restore voting rights protections in the wake of Republican-appointed Supreme Court justices gutting the historic legal breakthrough.
Yesterday, U.S. Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke offered congressional testimony pushing the same message, while also submitting a 20-page document to underscore the seriousness of the issue. TPM reported that “the thesis of her remarks was clear: imploring Congress to pass legislation and patch the holes gouged into the law by a court hostile to voting rights.”
“Without congressional action, the upcoming redistricting cycle will be the first without the full protections of the Voting Rights Act,” Clarke wrote. “Without preclearance, the Department will not have access to maps and other redistricting-related information from many jurisdictions where there is reason for concern, even though this kind of information is necessary to assess where voting rights are being restricted or inform how the Department directs its limited enforcement resources.”
As TPM’s report added, Clark also “highlighted the newfound difficulty of challenging discriminatory maps and voting practices without the Section 5 review process the Supreme Court effectively killed in Shelby.”
“On behalf of the attorney general, we ask Congress to pass appropriate legislation that will restore and improve the Voting Rights Act, enhancing the [Justice] Department’s ability to protect the right to vote in the 21st century and beyond,” the assistant attorney general concluded.
Her testimony comes on the heels of a plea from the Washington Post‘s editorial board, published over the weekend, for congressional Democrats to act as quickly as possible to bolster voting rights. “U.S. democracy is in danger,” the board wrote. “There is no more urgent priority.”








