The House is delaying the renewal of the Voting Rights Act because it is
'unfair' to nine southern STATES?

Recall the act opened the doors to millions of African Americans who
were outright prevented from being allowed to vote!

Today it protects them and millions of other Americans who just by
coincidence tend to vote in large percentages against Republicans!
Thevery same people holding up this nenewal!

Did we have enough voter fraud and manipulation yet?...and oh
lookie....this is just in time for the November 06 Congressional
elections....where the same party in danger from these folks is holding
this up!

PLEASE! contact your Congressman and put the spurs to him! You can find
yours here....

http://www.webslingerz.com/jhoffman/congress-email.html
<http://www.webslingerz.com/jhoffman/congress-email.html>

House delays renewal of Voting Rights Act

By LAURIE KELLMAN, Associated Press Writer
11 minutes ago


WASHINGTON - House Republican leaders on Wednesday postponed a vote on
renewing the 1965 Voting Rights Act after GOP lawmakers complained it
unfairly singles out nine Southern states for federal oversight, a
leadership aide said.

At a private meeting, several Republicans also balked at extending
provisions in the law that require ballots to be printed in more than
one language in neighborhoods where there are large numbers of
immigrants, said the aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity because
the decision had not yet been made public.

The four-decade-old law enfranchised millions of black voters by ending
poll taxes and literacy tests during the height of the civil rights
struggle. A vote on renewing it for another 25 years had been scheduled
for Wednesday, with both Republican and Democratic leaders behind it.

But in a private caucus meeting early in the day, enough Republicans
raised objections to the legislation and the way it would be debated to
persuade Republican leaders to postpone the vote.

"The speaker's had a standing rule that nothing would be voted on unless
there's a majority of the majority," said Rep. Lynn Westmoreland, R-Ga.,
who led the objections. "It was pretty clear at the meeting that the
majority of the majority wasn't there."

It was unclear whether the disagreements could be resolved this year,
said the leadership aide.

The temporary portions of the 1965 law expire in 2007, but House leaders
of both parties hope to pass the bill this year and use it to advance
their prospects in the fall midterm elections.

The legislation was approved by the Judiciary Committee on a 33-1 vote.
But despite leadership support, controversy has shadowed the legislation
40 years after it first prohibited policies that blocked blacks from
voting.

Several Republicans, led by Westmoreland, had worked to allow an
amendment that would ease a requirement that nine states win permission
from the Justice Department or a federal judge to change their voting
rules.

The amendment's backers say the requirement unfairly singles out and
holds accountable nine states that practiced racist voting policies
decades ago, based on 1964 voter turnout data: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona,
Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia.

Westmoreland says the formula for deciding which states are subject to
such "pre-clearance" should be updated every four years and be based on
voter turnout in the most recent three elections.

"The pre-clearance portions of the Voting Rights Act should apply to all
states, or no states," Westmoreland said. "Singling out certain states
for special scrutiny no longer makes sense."

The amendment has powerful opponents. From Republican and Democratic
leaders on down the House hierarchy, they argue that states with
documented histories of discrimination may still practice it and have
earned the extra scrutiny.

"This carefully crafted legislation should remain clean and unamended,"
Rep. John Conyers (news, bio, voting record), D-Mich., who worked on the
original bill, which he called "the keystone of our national civil
rights statutes."

By his own estimation, Westmoreland says the amendment stands little
chance of being adopted.

The House also could bring up an amendment that would require the
Justice Department to compile an annual list of jurisdictions eligible
for a "bailout" from the pre-clearance requirements.

That amendment, too, has little chance of surviving the floor debate,
leaving the underlying bill likely to pass the House. The Senate is
scheduled to consider an identical bill later this year.

Other efforts to chip away at the act have faltered under pressure from
powerful supporters.

One such measure, sponsored by Rep. Steve King (news, bio, voting
record), R-Iowa, would have stripped a provision that requires ballots
to be printed in several languages and interpreters be provided in
states and counties where large numbers of citizens speak limited
English.

"It seems sort of redundant to have both of those provisions," said Rep.
Phil Gingrey (news, bio, voting record), R-Ga. He added that any
foreign-speaking voter must prove some English proficiency to win
citizenship.

However, Judiciary Committee Chairman James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis.,
called that logic an effort to mix the divisive debate over immigration
reform with the Voting Rights Act renewal. Three-fourths of those whose
primary language is not English are American-born, he said.

___

The bill is H.R. 9



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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