By the Editors of the Southern Poverty Law Center
In his recent testimony before Congress, Special Counsel Robert Mueller pointedly warned the nation about Russia’s ongoing attempts to meddle in our nation’s elections.
All Americans, regardless of their political beliefs, should be
gravely concerned about this threat from abroad. But we should be
equally – perhaps even more – concerned about efforts to rig our
elections from within.
Since the U.S. Supreme Court gutted a key provision of the Voting
Rights Act in 2013, partisan politicians at the state level have enacted
a wave of voting restrictions that have disenfranchised hundreds of thousands, possibly millions, of people.
The promoters of these laws, including President Trump,
claim they’re intended to prevent individual voters from committing
fraud at the ballot box, such as voting more than once or voting when
they are not eligible. But that’s a fig leaf – and a skimpy one at that.
Researchers have confirmed through exhaustive studies that such fraud
is a myth.
The real threats to democracy are laws and election procedures
clearly designed to help the party in power win elections by placing
needless barriers in front of African Americans, low-income voters and
others who are more likely to vote for their opponents.
Immediately after the ruling in Shelby County v. Holder
six years ago, for example, North Carolina lawmakers enacted new voting
restrictions that were later struck down by a federal court as an
unconstitutional effort to “target African-Americans with almost surgical precision.”
The law’s voter ID provision, the court wrote, “retained only those
types of photo ID disproportionately held by whites and excluded those
disproportionately held by African-Americans.” Plus, its elimination of
early voting disproportionately affected black voters.
To its credit, the U.S. Supreme Court let the lower court’s ruling stand. But a number of other voter suppression laws and procedures
have been allowed by the courts, sometimes because the discriminatory
intent or impact is not as obvious as the North Carolina law.
This summer, the Court decided
that disputes over another form of election-rigging – partisan
gerrymandering – are “non-judiciable,” meaning it will not intervene
when politicians intentionally draw legislative and congressional
districts in ways that give them a partisan advantage.
In her dissent, Justice Elena Kagan, wrote.
The partisan gerrymanders in these
cases deprived citizens of the most fundamental of their constitutional
rights: the rights to participate equally in the political process, to
join with others to advance political beliefs, and to choose their
political representatives. [They] … debased and dishonored our
democracy, turning upside-down the core American idea that all
governmental power derives from the people. These gerrymanders enabled
politicians to entrench themselves in office as against voters’
preferences. They promoted partisanship above respect for the popular
will. They encouraged a politics of polarization and dysfunction. If
left unchecked, gerrymanders like the ones here may irreparably damage
our system of government.
Whether based on race or the political preference of voters,
gerrymandering can sometimes result in the control of legislative bodies
by parties that get fewer votes than their opponents when every member
is on the ballot. Indeed, this happened in the elections for the U.S.
House of Representatives in 2012, when Democrats picked up 1.4 million
more votes than Republicans, yet Republicans won 33 more seats.
In 2018, majorities of voters in Pennsylvania, Michigan and North
Carolina chose Democrats for state House races, yet, because of
gerrymandered maps, Republicans maintained their House majorities in those states.
To be clear, the Supreme Court did differentiate between gerrymandering based on partisanship and that based on race. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that redistricting plans that “explicitly discriminate on the basis of race … are of course presumptively invalid.”
But some civil rights lawyers fear this may be a distinction without a
real difference and that the new precedent could have unintended
consequences for legal challenges to racial gerrymanders. Kristen Clarke
and Jon Greenbaum of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights under law wrote:
The Supreme Court’s Rucho
decision may lead legislators to believe that they can get away with
racial gerrymandering in places where race and party are highly
correlated, by defending these claims on the basis that their decisions
were made for partisan, not racial, reasons. Although the Rucho
decision did not give an express imprimatur to such connivance, history
has shown that those intent on discrimination will use any means
available to achieve their goals.
The Supreme Court’s decision comes at a crucial time. After the 2020
Census, every state will redraw its district lines. Those new maps could
help politicians lock in their power for years even when the majority
of voters may want something different.
Whether through gerrymandering, strict voter ID laws or other types of voter suppression, it’s clear that our electoral system – and democracy itself – is under assault.
That’s why the Southern Poverty Law Center this year launched a new legal team to join the fight for voting rights in the courts and legislatures across the Deep South.
In early July, the SPLC filed suit
against the state of Florida to overturn a new law that contradicts the
explicit language of Amendment 4, a ballot initiative approved by more
than 60 percent of Florida voters last November. The amendment
overturned a Jim Crow-era law that prevented about 1.4 million people
from voting because of previous criminal convictions. In reaction, the
Florida Legislature passed a law requiring those new enfranchised voters
to pay off all court-related debt before they could regain their voting
rights – effectively disenfranchising many of them again.
The SPLC is also suing to overturn
a similar Jim Crow law in Mississippi, one that strips voting rights –
for life – from people convicted of certain crimes. Today, the law
prevents one of every six black adults in the state – and some 200,000
people overall – from casting a ballot.
These are just a few of the cases and causes the SPLC is taking up as
it works to end systematic voter suppression and ensure that everyone
has an opportunity to make their voice heard at the ballot box.
“Many people fought and died so that all citizens have a voice in our
society through the right to vote, yet many men and women –
disproportionately people of color and poor people – have been denied
this right,” said Nancy Abudu,
the SPLC’s deputy legal director for voting rights. “A healthy
democracy depends on full participation by all members of society.”
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