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.
WASHINGTON - The American Civil Liberties Union today applauded President
Bush as he signed into law the "Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks, and Coretta Scott
King Voting Rights Reauthorization and Amendments Act of 2006." Congress
rejected attempts to dilute the original intent of the bill and passed a "clean"
reauthorization bill, which renews key provisions that would otherwise expire in
2007.
"We applaud President Bush for signing into law this bill so vital to
American democracy," said Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington
Legislative Office. "However, passage of this bill does not mean we can rest.
Sadly, voting discrimination still takes place. Renewal of the Voting Rights Act
must be followed by vigorous enforcement by the executive branch and the
courts."
Fredrickson attended today’s signing ceremony with LaShawn Warren, ACLU
Legislative Counsel for Civil Rights. The ACLU had waged a massive campaign to
promote the act’s renewal. The efforts included:
A comprehensive report introduced into the congressional record:
"The Case for Extending and Amending the Voting Rights Act: Voting Rights
Litigation, 1982-2006" which documents 293 ACLU cases brought in 31 states to
protect the rights to vote;
Congressional testimony by ACLU President Nadine Strossen and ACLU
Voting Rights Project Director Laughlin McDonald;
A Voting Rights Act documentary which aired on Court TV;
A public policy report introduced into the
congressional record: "Promises to Keep: The Impact of the Voting Rights Act
2006, which details the practical effects of the Voting Rights Act;
Web action alerts that generated more than 100,000 phone calls and
e-mails from ACLU activists.
"Unfortunately, equal voting rights still do not exist in many parts of the
country," said Warren. "We remain confident that renewal of this historic civil
rights law will play an essential role in the struggle to eliminate
discrimination in voting."
To read more about the ACLU’s campaign to renew the Voting
Rights Act, go to: www.votingrights.org