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11:21 am CST - January 06, 2012
Posted under On The Record
Texas Case Could Lead to Changes in Voting Rights Act
By Ariane de Vogue – ABC News
The case could have important political consequences, and highlights a lurking issue regarding the continued viability of a key provision of the Voting Rights Act, the landmark legislation passed in 1965 to protect minorities from discriminatory voting practices.
At issue are two very different sets of redistricting maps drawn up to take into account new census numbers for the state: Texas has grown by 4.3 million people since the previous census, and minorities make up the majority of the growth. Because of the population growth, Texas was awarded four additional seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Last spring the Republican-dominated Texas legislature passed one set of redistricting maps. But Democrats and minority rights groups immediately criticized them, arguing they did not reflect the growth of minority representation.
Texas, a state with a history of past discrimination in voting, is subject to Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, which requires the state to get approval or “preclearance” from the Department of Justice or a federal court in Washington, D.C., for any election-related changes.
As such, a Washington, D.C., court is currently reviewing the Texas maps. Because the court realized that the redistricting issue would not get resolved before the next election, it asked a panel of three Texas judges to draw up a set of interim maps.
Those interim maps are at the heart of the Supreme Court challenge. Texas Attorney General Gregg Abbott asked the high court to block the court-drawn maps, which he said favored Democrats, arguing that the Texas court did not give enough deference to the legislature’s maps.
The Supreme Court agreed to temporarily block the interim maps and expedite a review of the redistricting issue.
In court papers, Paul D. Clement, an attorney representing Texas, argued that the Texas court improperly ordered “sweeping changes” to the legislature-enacted maps and “made numerous highly controversial policy judgments.”
“Even though the vast majority of districts for the Texas House had not even been challenged by DOJ in the preclearance proceeding or by the plaintiffs in this case, the majority’s interim plan redrew the boundaries of 128 of the 150 House districts,” Clement wrote.
He argued that the Supreme Court should allow the maps drawn by the legislature, not those drawn by the Texas court, to be used temporarily in the upcoming election while the preclearance procedure runs its course.
The Obama administration disagreed. It argued that if the Supreme Court were to allow even the temporary use of the legislature-drawn maps it would undermine Section 5′s mandate that requires the state to obtain preclearance before enforcing voting changes.
Stanford Law School professor Pamela S. Karlan, who serves as counsel for the Mexican American Legislative Caucus, agreed, saying, “To allow an unprecleared plan to go in effect when it has been challenged long before an election cycle would be a major retreat from the way Section 5 has operated until now.
Although the constitutionality of Section 5 is not presented in this case, election law experts said the court would soon have to face that much more explosive question
“This is an issue that comes up every redistricting cycle,” said Mark P. Jones, a professor of political science at Rice University. “As time passes, the ability of the Voting Rights Act to resist conservative pressure weakens. The Supreme Court will in turn be under increasing pressure to clarify the extent and the reach of the Act almost 50 years after its passage.”
In 2006, Congress extended Section 5, which affects 17 states, for another 25 years, and last month Attorney General Eric Holder gave a speech passionately endorsing the law. But critics said that states should no longer be punished for discriminatory practices of the past.
Erin Chemerinsky, a professor of law at the University of California at Irvine, said that the constitutionality of Section 5 is very much “the backdrop of what the Supreme Court will be considering.
“Ultimately, the cases highlight a crucial issue sure to come directly before the court: Was the extension of Section 5 for another 25 years constitutional,” Chemerinsky wrote in the American Bar Journal.
In the meantime, the redistricting controversy is wreaking havoc in Texas. Primary dates have been postponed until April, voters are not sure who their candidates are, and election officials worry that they won’t be able to print and mail absentee and overseas ballots in time.
The Supreme Court is expected to act quickly. “Texas needs to have a map, and it needs to have one soon,” said Karlan.
3 Comments
CWJensen
3:59 pm CST
January 06, 2012
Obama and the Attorney General have NOT respect for the law or CONSTITUTION.
That being said UNTIL they are both gone…………………DO NOT hold your BREATH.
William Miller
5:46 pm CST
January 06, 2012
I have a question in regard to the statement of the articles author of “Texas, a state with a history of past discrimination in voting …”. At the time of this history of past voting discrimination was the Texas Government republican or democrat? I suspect that it was democrat. Democrats, I have heard, have a long historic legacy of voter fraud and discrimination of republican minorities in the south and a history of slavery, segregation and terrorist acts of lynching black republican or so I have heard. Republican’s just don’t seem to fit that charge. Any history folks out there?
Rick B.
8:44 am CST
January 06, 2012
You are correct. Historically it has always been Democrats in legislatures that opposed civil rights laws. it was a Democrat governor who turned the fire hoses on civil rights marches. At the height of the thuggery of the KKK, half as many whites were lynched as were blacks. The far vast majority of lynchings were not for “interracial affairs” as Hollywood would have you believe, but for daring to run for office or vote as Republicans. After the civil war, many blacks ran for office as Republicans, the same party that was responsible for their emancipation, and many successfully so. They were often violently opposed in the South by Democrat terrorist groups like the KKK in the late 1800′s and early 1900′s.
Seeing in the 60′s that they would inevitably lose the battle for civil rights, the Democrats changed strategies. At this time blacks had strong nuclear families and were growing increasingly affluent. But LBJ’s “Great Society” recast them as “victims” of social discrimination, whatever that is, and created “entitlements” as a “war on poverty”. With the aid of a liberal media and press, history was literally re-written where suddenly the Democrats were “for the little guy”. The only catch of their entitlements were: fathers had to be absent to collect, and no outside income of any kind was allowed. With these laws they managed to destroy minority families and re-enslave them as dependent “victims” of the state. When the movie “The Matrix” depicted evil machines enslaving humanity to be nothing more than batteries, a source of power, I thought “Hey, the Democrats thought of that first.”
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