Yet again, worth a read. The title of his Balkinization piece:
Q. What’s worse than discrimination? (A) Accusations of bigotry. (B) Stopping discrimination.
More here.
This National Law Journal piece discusses — in necessarily preliminary fashion — DOJ plans for voting rights enforcement going forward. “The Justice Department did not respond to questions about the enforcement strategy following the decision” . . . so most… Continue reading
This opinion piece repeats a claim I’ve heard often recently: section 5 buttressed Republican political fortunes by helping Republicans with control over redistricting overpack Democrats; now, things will change.
That’s a claim that still strikes me as wrong. If Republicans… Continue reading
That’s right, lever machines. Now, without the need to preclear their use in upcoming municipal elections. For elections technology in New York, time doesn’t seem to pass: it just is.
I do have a question about the legality of… Continue reading
And really, it’s a reaction to many of the decisions of the week:
Martin Luther King famously said that the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice. If the Supreme Court’s recent decision to invalidate… Continue reading
This is the title of a remarkable website chronicling the history of the Voting Rights Act. It generously incorporates multimedia exhibits taken from primary sources, and looks to be an exceptional resource.
And what really blows my mind is that… Continue reading
Sam offers his suggestions for a way forward after Shelby County, in the New Republic. The operative nub:
A new Elections Clause approach would forgo the attempt to freeze the status quo by forcing prior federal approval. Instead Congress could… Continue reading