Subject: Electionlawblog news and commentary 6/16/06
From: Rick Hasen
Date: 6/16/2006, 8:08 AM
To: election-law

"Defending Georgia v. Aschroft (While Supporting Renewal of the Voting Rights Act)"

Bob Bauer will be presenting these remarks at the ACS Convention. It begins:


Bob's paper is very interesting, especially read against the uncertainty of the language that the draft bill uses to assure the partial reversal of Ashcroft. The bill says that the Supreme Court in Georgia v. Ashcroft "misconstrued Congress' original intent in enacting the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and narrowed the protections afforded by section 5 of such Act." Later the bill states that any voting qualifications etc. "that has the purpose of or will have the effect of diminishing the ability of any citizens of the U.S." to vote on account of race, color or language minority status violates section 5. Bob notes (fn. 4) that the section lacks clarity.

There are two interesting questions to ask regarding this language: (1) what would courts interpret the language to mean? and (2) why would "the deal" include a provision lacking in clarity?

On the first point, we have already seen some early attempts to give the meaning certain content in particular directions. Compare, for example, the discussion beginning on page 68 of the Final House Report with Part III (beginning on page 7) of Nate Persily's supplemental testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee. There's a certain parallel here with the debate in 1982 over the meaning of section 2, which ultimately got "clarified" when Justice Brennan crafted his three-part threshold test, followed by a "totality of the circumstances" test, in Gingles.

On the second question, sometimes lack of clarity in legislation is necessary to keep a deal together. Perhaps the section has not been drafted more clearly (for example, to tell us how the courts should treat influence district claims under section 5) because to do so would break up the coalition between the Republican leadership and the CBC in the House.

In any case, we can be sure that if the VRA renewal passes in this form, there will be plenty of work for lawyers urging various interpretations on the courts of this provision, and room for a political DOJ (Democrat or Republican) to read it in ways that might suit the Administration's political needs.



"Senate alters bill to transform La. congressional elections"

AP offers this report, which begins: "BATON ROUGE, La. If Louisiana is going to shed its unique 'open primary' system, then the state must make sure independent voters are allowed to cast ballots in the new party primary elections."




Don't Miss this week's Electionline Weekly

This week's newsletter features the articles "Southern States Employ Ranked-Choice Voting to Meet Short Timetables" and "New Restrictions on Voter Registration Drives Result in Legal Challenges."


"Head of new voter database resigns"

See this news from Florida.


Ted Shaw's Follow Up VRA Renewal Testimony Now Available

You can download it here.


Could Democrats Back Sen. Lieberman As an Independent if He Loses the Democratic Primary in Connecticut?

That question is asked, but not answered, here.


Two More Law Profs Join VRA Renewal Guest Blogging

I am pleased to add two important voices to the law professor forum on VRA renewal.

Ellen Katz, a law professor at Michigan, was the primary researcher and writer of this important report on the history of section 2 violations since 1982.

Spencer Overton, a law professor at George Washington, is the author of the new book, Stealing Democracy: The New Politics of Voter Suppression (whose praises I have already sung).

I look forward to reading their interesting contributions!


Senate Judiciary Committee Schedules Another Hearing on VRA Renewal

The committee's Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Property Rights has scheduled a hearing on "Voting Rights Act: Policy Perspectives and Views from the Field" for Wednesday, June 21, 2006 at 2:00 p.m. in the Dirksen Senate Office Building Room 226. This could well be the last hearing we'll have on VRA renewal.
-- 
Rick Hasen
William H. Hannon Distinguished Professor of Law
Loyola Law School
919 Albany Street
Los Angeles, CA  90015-1211
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rick.hasen@lls.edu
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