Disenfranchising 40% of a state’s citizens cannot be reconciled with representative democracy
The Supreme Court gave a “two-fer” to white supremacists and proponents of Republican autocracy: First, six right-wing justices completed the erasure of the crowning achievement of the 1960s Civil Rights Movement, the Voting Rights Act. Second, in the same case, Louisiana v. Callais, the right-winger judges approved of states shaping legislative districts that deny the opposing party any role in government.
In essence, the Supreme Court okayed the destruction of
Congress as an instrument of American democracy.
The Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution was enacted and
ratified five years after the Civil War. The Amendment confirmed – in principle
– that African-American citizens have the right to vote and to have their votes
count.
So said the Constitution. But for almost a century the former Confederate states negated African-Americans’ right to vote.
The Voting Rights Act put an end to the myriad legal schemes Southern white politicians had used to disenfranchise Black Americans
The Voting Rights Act of 1965 put an end to the myriad legal
schemes that Southern white politicians had used to disenfranchise Black
Americans and terminated the ploys used to deny African-Americans a fair
opportunity to elect representatives of their choice.


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