Just 22 days after the Supreme Court struck down a key part of the Voting Rights Act (VRA), the Senate is launching a debate on how Congress can revive one of the linchpins of the civil rights agenda.
On Wednesday, the Judiciary Committee begins its first hearing, “From Selma to Shelby County,” on the VRA after the Supreme Court’s decision in Shelby. (The decision invalidated the formula that the law had used to patrol voter discrimination in certain regions of the country.)
A close reading of the witness list suggests one good sign for reform.
Republican congressman Jim Sensenbrenner is going to testify. That means a few things.
First, the Senate and House are proactively coordinating a legislative strategy for the VRA – a rarity nowadays. (There are indications the House will hold hearings in July.)
Second, at least some insiders want VRA reform to be a bipartisan winner, not a partisan failure that one side can simply use against the other in 2014.
And third, there are some reasonable Republicans left in the building.
Sensenbrenner has been a friend of voting rights legislation. As the Republicans’ Judiciary Committee Chairman, he led the last VRA reauthorization. And the one before that – as he likes to remind people.









