Posted by Abigail Thernstrom, guest-blogging:
The Messy, Murky Voting Rights Act: A Primer.
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_08_16-2009_08_22.shtml#1250285688


   First and foremost, much gratitude to Eugene Volokh for creating space
   for me on his splendid, indispensable blog.

   Voting Rights -- and Wrongs is my second effort to understand a
   statute that has become, in the words of Richard Pildes, �one of the
   most ambitious legislative efforts in the world to define the
   appropriate balance between the political representation of majorities
   and minorities in the design of democratic institutions.�

   Defining that appropriate balance was not the original aim of the 1965
   Voting Rights Act. Its initial purpose was simple: enfranchising
   southern blacks ninety-five years after the passage of the Fifteenth
   Amendment.

   The statute has become such an eye glazing mess that it�s easy to
   forget that in 1965 it was beautifully designed and absolutely
   essential. Southern blacks were still kept from the polls by
   fraudulent literacy tests, intimidation, and violence.

   Black ballots had been the levers of change that white supremacists
   most feared, and they were not prepared to go quietly into the night.
   Enforcing Fifteenth Amendment rights thus required overwhelming
   federal power -- radical legislation that involved an unprecedented
   intrusion of federal authority into state and local election affairs.

   In this first post, I provide a little guide to that radical (and
   confusing) legislation.

   The act put southern states under the equivalent of federal
   receivership in the conduct of their elections. It suspended literacy
   tests throughout the region. It provided for the use of federal
   registrars where necessary. And it demanded that racially suspect
   jurisdictions submit all proposed changes in their methods of election
   to the Justice Department (or the seldom-used D.C. district court) for
   pre-approval -- �preclearance.� A statistical trigger that had been
   reverse-engineered identified the �covered� jurisdictions; the framers
   of the act knew which states should be covered and arrived at the
   proper formula.

   In states and counties covered by section 5 -- initially all in the
   South -- the burden of proving that changes in voting procedure were
   free of racial animus was placed on them. A city, for instance, that
   submitted for preclearance a proposed enlargement of its governing
   council had to prove a negative, an absence of discriminatory purpose
   or effect. Suspected discrimination was sufficient to sink a proposed
   change.

   The provision compelled states to �beg federal authorities to approve
   their policies,� and thus so distorted our constitutional structure as
   to almost erase the distinction between federal and state power,
   Justice Hugo Black complained in 1966 when the Supreme Court upheld
   the constitutionality of the statute.

   It was a constitutionally serious point, and should not have been
   forgotten in later years. At the time, however, all other attempts to
   secure Fifteenth Amendment rights had failed. That, too, is a point
   that needs to be remembered.

   The act very quickly succeeded in meeting its original aim. Southern
   black registration skyrocketed. But ensuring black electoral equality
   was more difficult than originally understood. In Mississippi and
   elsewhere, counties and other political subdivisions began to
   structure elections to minimize the number of blacks likely to win
   public office.

   In the face of racist maneuvers to maintain white supremacy, in 1969
   the Supreme Court expanded the definition of discriminatory voting
   practices to include devices that �diluted� the impact of the black
   vote. At-large voting, districting lines, and other election
   procedures whose impact could deprive blacks of expected gains in
   officeholding became subject to preclearance.

   The Court had put the enforcement of the act on a proverbial slippery
   slope. Ensuring that black ballots carried proper political weight
   became the expanded goal of the act. From there it was but a short
   slide to a constitutionally problematic system of reserved seats for
   minority group members, even in settings with no history of racist
   exclusion.

   And from there, with another short slide, proportional racial and
   ethnic representation became the only logical standard by which to
   measure true electoral opportunity. Anything less than proportional
   officeholding suggested a �diluted� minority vote -- one that was less
   effective than it could be.

   In any case, civil rights advocates saw proportional results as the
   proper measure of opportunity -- in employment, education, and
   contracting, too -- and those who wrote, interpreted, and enforced the
   law consistently took their cues from these advocates.

   Thus, when the Justice Department rejected a districting map as
   racially suspect, the jurisdiction was obligated to go back to the
   drawing board. New lines had to be drawn, with the understanding that
   the maximum number of possible safe black legislative seats would be
   created.

   The original statute was altered in other important respects. Section
   5 was an emergency provision with an expected life of only five years.
   It was repeatedly renewed, most recently in 2006 for another quarter
   century.

   Every renewal became an occasion for amendments that strengthened the
   act; never did Congress stop to consider whether the statute�s
   unprecedented powers should, in fact, be pared back in recognition of
   its success. Thus, as black political participation was steadily and
   dramatically rising, federal power over local and state electoral
   affairs was paradoxically expanding.

   In 1970 and 1975, new groups and new places came under preclearance
   coverage. An arbitrary, careless change in the statistical trigger,
   for instance, made section 5 applicable to three boroughs in New York
   City (although not the other two), even though black New Yorkers had
   been freely voting since the enactment of the Fifteenth Amendment in
   1870, and had held municipal offices for decades.

   In 1975, amendments added Hispanics, Asian Americans, American
   Indians, and Alaskan Natives to the list of those eligible for
   extraordinary protection, although their experience with racist
   exclusion from the polls was not remotely comparable to that of
   southern blacks.

   With more mindless changes to the statistical trigger, preclearance
   was also extended to Texas, Arizona, Alaska, and scattered counties in
   California and elsewhere across the nation.

   In 1982, Congress rewrote an innocuous preamble, section 2.
   Preclearance kicked in only when a jurisdiction altered some aspect of
   electoral procedure. But, as amended, section 2 provided plaintiffs
   with a powerful tool to attack long-standing methods of election
   anywhere in the nation that had the �result� of denying the right to
   vote on account of race or color.

   Section 5 had provided a remedy for vote dilution only relative to the
   electoral strength that blacks and Hispanics enjoyed before a
   jurisdiction altered a districting map or other voting practices, the
   Supreme Court held in 1976. It was an interpretation that squared with
   the structure of the Voting Rights Act, and delegated to Justice
   Department attorneys and staff remote from the scene a limited, and
   thus manageable, task: stopping the institution of new electoral
   arrangements that undermined the force of the 1965 law.

   But section 2 guaranteed electoral equality in some absolute sense --
   undefined and indefinable. The obvious solution, once again, was to
   resort to proportionality as the standard by which to measure of
   racial fairness, even though it rests on a profound misconception of
   the �natural� distribution of racial and ethnic groups across the
   residential, occupational, and other aspects of the social landscape.

   Moreover, racist exclusion, not statistical imbalance, should have
   been the concern.

   At the same time, race-conscious districting brought real gains in
   political integration -- gains that cannot be easily dismissed. But
   this is the topic of the next post.

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