The Voting Rights Act is a historic civil rights law that is meant to ensure that the right to vote is not denied on account of race or color.
Unless Congress acts quickly, this could be the first election in 50 years without full protection of the right to vote for minority voters. We need Congress to act fast – to pass the Voting Rights Amendment Act and protect the right to vote for all people.



1866 Civil Rights Act of 1866 grants citizenship, but not the right to vote, to all native-born Americans.


Congress passes the Fifteenth Amendment giving African American men the right to vote.


Louisiana passes "grandfather clauses" to keep former slaves and their descendants from voting. As a result, registered black voters drops from 44.8% in 1896 to 4.0% four years later. Mississippi, South Carolina, Alabama and Virginia follow Louisiana's lead by enacting their own grandfather clauses.


Only 3% of eligible African Americans in the South are registered to vote.
Jim Crow laws like literacy tests and poll taxes were meant to keep African Americans from voting.


Poll taxes are outlawed with the adoption of the 24th Amendment.


More than 500 non-violent civil rights marchers are attacked by law enforcement officers while attempting to march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama to demand the need for African American voting rights.
President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Voting Rights Act into law, permanently barring barriers to political participation by racial and ethnic minorities, prohibiting any election practice that denies the right to vote on account of race, and requiring jurisdictions with a history of discrimination in voting to get federal approval for changes in their election laws before they can take effect.


By the end of 1965, 250,000 new black voters are registered, one third of them by federal examiners.


President Richard Nixon signed an extension of the Voting Rights Act.
Nixon: "The Voting Rights Act of 1965 has opened participation in the political process."
Barbara Jordan of Houston and Andrew Young of Atlanta become the first African Americans elected to Congress from the South since Reconstruction.


President Gerald Ford signed an extension of the Voting Rights Act.


President Ronald Reagan signed a 25-year extension of the Voting Rights Act.


Due, in part, to the enforcement of the Voting Rights Act, the number of black elected officials in Georgia grows to 495 in 1990 from just three prior to the VRA.


Congress extended Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act for an additional 25 years.


A record number of restrictions to voting were introduced in state legislatures nationwide, including photo ID requirements, cuts to early voting and restrictions to voter registration. Many of these states have histories of voter discrimination and are covered under the VRA. Voter Suppression Map
Restrictions to voting passed in South Carolina, Texas and Florida are found to disproportionately impact minority voters.


Florida passed a law that restricts voter registration and made cuts to early voting. The majority of African Americans in Florida rely on early voting to cast a ballot, and register to vote through community based registration.
"The more we get out to vote, the better opportunities we'll have"


South Carolina passed a restrictive voter ID law that would keep more than 180,000 African Americans from casting a ballot.


Under the VRA, the DOJ blocked South Carolina's voter ID law, saying it discriminates against minority voters. The DC federal district court later precleared the law but only because the state agreed that an ID was not required for voting.


Texas passed one of the nation's most restrictive voter ID laws. Under the VRA, the state was required to submit the law to DOJ or the DC federal district court for approval. The court blocked the law, citing racial impact. Court Blocks Texas Voter ID Law, Citing Racial Impact
Since 2010 alone, the Department of Justice has had 18 Section 5 objections to voting laws in Texas, South Carolina, Georgia, North Carolina, Mississippi and Louisiana.


The ACLU represented the NAACP's Alabama chapter in Shelby v. Holder. In the decision, the Supreme Court crippled one of the most effective protections for the right to vote by rendering ineffective the requirement that certain jurisdictions with a history of voting discrimination get pre-approval for voting changes. States have wasted no time enacting potentially discriminatory laws including Texas, Mississippi, North Carolina, Florida, Virginia, South Dakota, Iowa, and Indiana.
The good news is that we have the chance to fix it now. Congress can pass a new, flexible and forward-looking set of protections that work together to guarantee our right to vote — and it's not just wishful thinking. Since 2006, Congress extended the key sections of the Voting Rights Act on four occasions in overwhelming, bipartisan votes. Once again, a bipartisan group of lawmakers have come together to work on these critical protections.


In January 2014, a bipartisan group of lawmakers introduced the Voting Rights Amendment Act to repair the damage done by the Shelby decision. Congress can pass a new, flexible and forward-looking set of protections that work together to guarantee our right to vote — and it's not just wishful thinking. Since 2006, Congress extended the key sections of the Voting Rights Act on four occasions in overwhelming, bipartisan votes. The last three extensions have been signed by Republican presidents. If this is not passed soon, 2014 will be the first election in 50 years without the full protection of the Voting Rights Act for minority voters.
Although we have made significant gains in voting rights, discrimination at the polls persists today and cannot be dismissed as a relic of the past. Minority voters still face significant obstacles in registering to vote and casting ballots. That's why we need Congress to act decisively, and to act now.