Election Reform
Related: About this forumNew study refutes Justice Robert's rationale on weakening VRA
BrennanCenter
In his 2013 decision weakening the VRA, Chief Justice John Roberts said the formula used to determine which jurisdictions needed to gain prior approval before changing voting laws was out of date. But a new study http://www.brennancenter.org/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=81504&qid=4861768 from California Institute of Technology Prof. Morgan Kousser casts doubt on Robertss claim. Kousser examined http://www.brennancenter.org/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=81505&qid=4861768 thousands of voting rights cases from 1957 to 2013 and found 90 percent occurred in previously covered areas. The research shows the VRA succeeded in accurately homing in on counties where the vast majority of violations would take place, Koussar said. http://www.brennancenter.org/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=81652&qid=4861768
truebluegreen
(9,033 posts)and I bet he knew that when he wrote it.
Kip Humphrey
(4,753 posts)- a minority party permanently gaining control of all US governing jurisdictions.
summerschild
(725 posts)But jeepers I hope history gets it right when this Supreme Court and this Republican party are recorded for posterity as the despots they really are.
Don't spare their memory - don't spare their children. Give them the accountability they have mocked as they have destroyed democracy.
Gothmog
(154,614 posts)The decision by Roberts gutting the Voting Rights Act was based on some old bad law used to justify the Dred Scott decision. Now it turns out that the factual basis used by Roberts to gut the voting rights act is also false. Roberts had no facts backing up his claim that there was no discrimination on the basis of race in voting and gutted the Voting Rights Act on his belief (with no facts) that this was the case. A new study establishes that Roberts was wrong as to the facts (this is in addition to using very bad law to justify this decision). http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/new-study-rebuts-john-roberts-voting-rights-act
If Congress had started from scratch in 2006, it plainly could not have enacted the present coverage formula, Roberts wrote for the majority, explaining why that formula was being struck down.
But a comprehensive new study by a renowned historian and expert in voting discrimination suggests what voting rights advocates have been saying all along: that Roberts got it wrong.
Since 2009, Morgan Kousser, a professor of history and social science at the California Institute of Technology, has been collecting data on voting rights events across the country that resulted in a win for minorities. Kousser looked at over 4,100 voting rights lawsuits, inquiries by the Justice Department, and changes to laws in response to the threat of lawsuits, the great majority at the county level, stretching from 1957 to 2013.
Kousser found that over 90% of these events occurred in covered jurisdictionsthat is, places that, until the Supreme Courts decision, were required to submit their voting changes to the federal government for pre-clearance. The great majority of these jurisdictions were in the South.
The evidence, Kousser writes, shows that the Chief Justices factual assertions were incorrect, that the coverage formula was still congruent with proven violations.
Roberts first tried to gut the VRA back when he was a lawyer in the DOJ and has been going after the law ever since. The Shelby County case was a horrible case and now it is clear that this decision was not only based on bad law (the same legal principle used to justify Dredd Scott) but also on bad facts.