Author Archives: ELECTIONLAWCENTER.COM

Virginia Senator: “DOJ Supports Voter Suppression”

Ooops.  This wasn’t supposed to happen.  DOJ’s opposition to Voter ID stoked the civil rights base.  We heard from the Attorney General how it was a poll tax, 9th Circuit caselaw notwithstanding.  We heard how it was the second coming of Jim Crow. That the Justice Department exists to remove barriers to the ballot box – on and on and on.  The base loved it.

Then Virginia happened, and soon so will New Hampshire.  In Virginia the DOJ approved a voter ID law that the Washington Post opposed.  The base is suddenly concerned. 

Consider Virginia Senator Locke.  He says DOJ is aiding voter suppression.  More to come.  New Hampshire is next.  Once you decide to ride a tiger, it can be a wild unpredictable, high risk ride.

New study shows military voting participation rates plummeting to all-time lows

Link to a Military Voter Participation Project study here

This report reveals a bleak picture for military voters for the upcoming 2012 election as rates of participation are a fraction of that in 2008.  This study is a wealth of information on military voting participation rates in the battleground states and some of the causes of that sharp drop.  Some of the drop is directly related to a lack of implementation of key parts of the MOVE Act by the Department of Defense and a failure to fully enforce the MOVE Act by the Department of Justice. 

In the coming days, ELC will provide some analysis of the different parts of the study.  

Is There a Section 2 Lite?

Some imporatnt federal issues are implicated in a case I am litigating, namely the strength and scope of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.  Parts of a brief I filed today in Davis v. Guam:


            “Defendants do not dispute that Section 2 creates rights, and that the violation of those rights creates an Article III injury.  Rather, they suggest, for the first time, that Section 2 is inapplicable here.  For example, they misinterpret 42 U.S.C. § 1973(l)(c)(1), suggesting that it limits the reach of Section 2, instead of expanding it.  Resp. 7-8.  Section 1973(a) (Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act) is a stand-alone provision; it does not extend only to the examples contained in Section 1973(l)(c)(1).  See e.g., United States v. Brown, 494 F. Supp. 2d 440, 454 (S.D.Miss.2007) (Section 2 violation when candidate Walker treated unfairly in defendant’s home during intra-party dispute about challenge to placement of opposing candidate on ballot.).


            Even if defendants were correct that Section 1971(l)(c)(1) is an exhaustive list of those matters that can violate Section 2, the appearance of the word “proposition” adequately describes the plebiscite in the common usage of the term as it applies to elections where an issue or question is submitted broadly to the electorate.  E.g., Tigrett v. Cooper, 2012 WL 691892, *20-21 (W.D. Tenn. March 2, 2012); Armstrong v. Allain, 893 F. Supp. 1320, 1323 (S.D. Miss. 1994).    
        Defendants also quip that Guam “could not have been further from Congress’ mind” when it enacted Section 2 in 1965.   Resp.11.  Courts have squarely rejected such racially selective application of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act just because the victims of discrimination are not traditional racial minorities.   Brown, 494 F. Supp. 2d at 444. (“Section 2 provides no less protection to white voters than any other class of voters.  Any doubt as to this conclusion is allayed by a review of the history of Section 2.”).  One matter perhaps further from the mind of Congress in 1965 than Guam was the plight of white Mississippians.      
        Nevertheless, Section 2 protects everyone equally, even if defendants prefer that a diluted version be applied in Guam. Defendants correctly note that plaintiff does not cite any authority for the proposition that Section 2 prohibits a government sponsored and government-run registration system to poll only one race of voters in an election.  Resp. 7, n.5.  Plaintiff cites no authority for this proposition because no state has been so brazen since 1965 as to enact such a nakedly discriminatory law.  After the Voting Rights Act passed 1965, and after the bloodshed that characterized the fight over the right merely to register, states forever abandoned any laws even resembling such an illegal registration scheme. 


        Finally, and more broadly, defendants repeatedly imply that this Court should dilute civil rights protections because Guam is a mere territory and groups would be slighted if plaintiff prevails.  Defendants advance a “fundamental difference between citizenship unilaterally conferred upon residents of unincorporated territories and citizenship obtained by mutual consent.”  Resp.12.


        But defendants cite no authority that the statutes at issue in this case, including the Voting Rights Act and 42 U.S.C. § 1971, and the Fifteenth Amendment do not apply with equal strength in Guam as they do in Ohio or Georgia.  The defendants might prefer that these statutes be diluted when they are applied in Guam, but doing so would be error.  Neither may grievances about the decisions made by Congress in 1950 masquerade as an affirmative defense to modern race discrimination.”



Voter ID: Not a Poll Tax Anymore

Holder preclears Virginia Voter ID.  I guess calling it Jim Crow was yesterday’s news.  Or else they weren’t looking for a fight over something with 80 percent approval.  DOJ claims Virginia wasn’t photo ID, but the reality is it is easier for someone in South Carolina to vote than in Virginia. 

Look for the “poll tax”/photoID in New Hampshire to be precleared next.  Shelby awaits and bailouts help keep people at DOJ employed by sustaining Section 5. 

Racial Incitement Against Law-Abiding Poll Watchers

PJ Rule of Law:Here’s the problem, those poll watchers – which News21 simply must identify as white like some crime report from 1961 (A negro robbed a woman. . . ) – have a right to be in the polls under state law to observe the election. News21’s funders might not like the fact that tens of thousands of law abiding citizens will be in the polls all over the nation this fall to ensure that crimes don’t occur and laws are followed. But the poll watchers in the story did nothing wrong.

Except of course, they were white. What more do you need?

News21 published the racial paranoia of Jamila Gatlin as if there was not a whiff of crazy in it. To college kids, heads filled with all species of racial grievance, perhaps there wasn’t. But to the rest of us as adults live in a multi-racial country with hundreds of interactions in a week with people of all races, Gatlin sounds nuts.

Worse than nuts, actually. She sounds like the segregationist from 1950’s Mississippi. A black person ‘round here? How dare they!! Somebody do something.”