ACLU Letter to the House of Representative Regarding the Impending Floor Vote on Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and Amendments Act of 2006 (H.R. 9) (6/20/2006)
Re: Fannie
Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization
and Amendments Act of 2006 (H.R.
9)
Dear
Representatives:
A floor vote on the Fannie Lou
Hamer, Rosa Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and
Amendments Act of 2006 (H.R. 9) is expected this Wednesday, June 21, 2006. On behalf of the American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU), and its hundreds of thousands of members, activists, and
fifty-three affiliates nationwide, we write to urge you to support this
legislation and oppose any amendments that would weaken or compromise the spirit
or effectiveness of the law.
H.R. 9 Renews And Restores
Key Provisions Of The VRA.
This bill would reauthorize three
key enforcement provisions of the Voting Rights Act (VRA), which are set to
expire in 2007. These provisions
include: Section 5, which requires jurisdictions with significant histories of
discrimination in voting to get federal approval of any new voting practices or
procedures; Section 203, which ensures that U.S. citizen voters with limited
English proficiency get the help they need at the polls; and Section 8, which
authorizes the attorney general to appoint federal election observers where
there is evidence of attempts to intimidate minority voters at the polls. These
sections have been essential to eliminating and deterring voting discrimination
and granting access to the ballot box for minority citizens.
In addition to
reauthorizing the expiring provisions, the legislation would address two recent
Supreme Court decisions that have severely eroded the effectiveness of Section 5
of the Voting Rights Act—Reno v. Bossier Parish II and Georgia v.
Ashcroft. H.R. 9 restores the
original congressional intent of the VRA by making certain that Section 5 can
block voting changes that intentionally discriminate against minority
voters. In addition, it restores
Section 5 so that minority voters have the opportunity to elect representatives
of their choice who share their values, interests and concerns.[1] The Act also would increase access to
the courts by allowing the recovery of expert witness fees for plaintiffs. Expert witness testimony in voting
rights cases is essential for proving that voting discrimination exists.
We
Urge Members To Oppose Weakening Amendments.
Some members of Congress are
attempting to amend H.R. 9 in an effort to weaken or eliminate key enforcement
provisions that prevent discrimination.
Indeed, some members have proposed amendments they describe as an attempt
to “modernize” the VRA, but that, in reality, would significantly undercut the
VRA and make it subject to constitutional challenge.
It has been
proposed, for example, that the current formula for determining state coverage
be changed to reflect more current voting demographics. However, this suggestion by opponents of
the bill would eliminate the Act’s oversight of those jurisdictions where the
current record demonstrates a long and continuing history of discrimination in
voting. Congress has appropriately
focused both on the history of discrimination that gave rise to the coverage
formula, and the evidence of current and persisting forms of discrimination in
order to evaluate which jurisdictions remain subject to the special requirements
of Section 5.
Furthermore, the bailout
provision of the VRA works to ensure that the scope of Section 5 is not
overbroad or otherwise constitutionally flawed. Congress designed the bailout formula to
allow a jurisdiction that could demonstrate it had taken sufficient steps to
remove bars to minority enfranchisement to be released from preclearance. All jurisdictions that have attempted to
bail-out from coverage have been able to do so successfully. If, however, Section 5 or the bailout
provision were to be weakened, then formerly covered jurisdictions will have
escaped the need to make a showing of real progress in enfranchising their
minority voters.
It has also been proposed that Section 5
apply nationwide. Doing so would be
a “poison pill” for the VRA.
Currently, Section 5 is specifically directed at jurisdictions
with a history of discriminating against minority voters. Making Section 5 apply nationwide would
make it overly broad and unable to meet the Supreme Court’s requirements that
Section 5 be "narrowly tailored" or "congruent and proportional" to address the
harms it is designed to cure. It is
critical that Section 5 and its coverage formula stay intact.
The
Congressional Record Is Strong And Supports
Reauthorization.
The
House and Senate have held extensive hearings to examine whether there is a
continuing need for the VRA. The
record shows that while progress has been made, there is overwhelming evidence
that voting discrimination persists in jurisdictions covered by Section 5 and
Section 203. In fact,
since the VRA was last reauthorized in 1982, the Department of Justice and
disfranchised voters have brought hundreds of cases of intentional voter
discrimination before the courts—many within the last five years.
Many reports, including those submitted by the ACLU, document
the persistence of continued, purposeful voting discrimination in the covered
jurisdictions.[2] Over 8,000 pages of House and Senate
testimony strongly support the continuing need for the VRA.
Some Members of Congress have protested the
appropriateness of their states’ continued coverage under the Act. For example, despite some Members of the
Georgia delegation’s assertions to the contrary, Georgia’s abysmal record
of protecting the rights of its minority citizens provides undeniable evidence
underscoring the need to continue the vital protections of the VRA in
Georgia.
Since the VRA was last
reauthorized in 1982, the American
Civil Liberties Union Voting Rights Project (VRP) has brought more
litigation to enforce voting rights in Georgia than in any other state. From 1982 to 2005, the ACLU initiated a total
of 141 voting rights lawsuits in Georgia, a substantial portion of which
were brought under Section 5.
Moreover, more than 70% of the total lawsuits filed by VRP offer concrete
evidence of the continued efforts by Georgia officials to discriminate against
minority voters. In all of these
instances, Georgia had to change its conduct with respect to its minority
voters.
Support
For The VRA Is Strongly Bipartisan.
There is precedent for bipartisan
support of the VRA. When the VRA
was first passed in 1965, the vast majority of both Republicans and Democrats
alike were on the record supporting its critical importance. Although at that time Republicans were a
minority in Congress, on the House side 82% of Republicans supported the Act’s
passage, as did 78% of the Democrats.
Moreover, 93% of the Senate Republican caucus and 73% of the Senate
Democrats voted for final passage.
More recently, President George W. Bush has stated, “many active citizens
struggled hard to convince Congress to pass civil rights legislation that
ensured the rights of all – including the right to vote. That victory was a milestone in the
history of civil rights. Congress
must act to renew the Voting Rights Act of 1965.”[3]
Because the expiring provisions of the
VRA deter voting discrimination, failure to fully renew and restore the expiring
provisions would undoubtedly undermine the progress this country has made in
ending voting discrimination. On
Wednesday, June 21, 2006, we strongly urge you to support the Fannie Lou
Hamer, Rosa Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and
Amendments Act of 2006 (H.R.
9) and oppose any weakening amendments.
There is no greater tribute Congress can give to the lives of the women
after whom this bill is named than to renew and restore the VRA.
Sincerely,
Caroline Fredrickson,
Director ACLU Washington Legislative
Office
Laughlin McDonald, Director ACLU Voting
Rights Project
LaShawn Warren, Legislative Counsel ACLU Washington Legislative
Office Deborah J. Vagins, Policy Counsel for
Civil Rights ACLU Washington
Legislative Office
Endnotes
[1] For
more information on these cases, refer to our policy report “Promises to Keep:
The Impact of the Voting Rights Act in 2006,” available at www.aclu.org/votingrights/gen/24396leg20060307.html. [2] See
“The Case for Extending and Amending the Voting Rights Act: Voting Rights
Litigation, 1982-2006: A Report of the Voting Rights Project of the American
Civil Liberties Union, ” available at www.aclu.org/votingrights/gen/24394leg20060306.html. [3]
President George W. Bush, President Celebrates African American History Month at
the White House (Feb. 22, 2006) (transcript available at
www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2006/02/20060222-6.html).
|