The ACLU's Voting Rights Project has worked to protect the
gains in political participation won by racial and language minorities since the 1965
passage of the Voting Rights Act.
Justice Department Decision on Voting Rights Likely Swayed by Politics, ACLU Raises Serious Concerns About Undermining of Voting Rights Act (11/17/2005)
WASHINGTON - The American Civil Liberties Union today expressed concerns that
the Justice Department rejected the recommendations of its own team of voting
rights experts when it approved a Georgia voter identification law. The experts
issued a detailed 51-page memorandum that showed that the proposal would
discriminate against minority voters. The decision to reject their
recommendation was revealed today in a front-page story in the Washington
Post.
Under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, Georgia is one of nine states
required to submit any proposed changes to its voting rules to the Justice
Department for pre-clearance to ensure that such changes will not have a
discriminatory impact on minority voters. Portions of the Voting Rights Act,
including Section 5, are set to expire in 2007, unless Congress acts to renew
them.
The following can be attributed to LaShawn Warren, an ACLU Legislative
Counsel:
"Reports that high ranking political officials at the Department of Justice
overturned the recommendations of experienced career civil rights attorneys and
analysts are extremely disturbing. Section 5 enforcement must be administered in
an impartial and non-partisan manner. The right to vote should not hinge on the
political persuasions of those in government."