September 20, 2004

The Voting Rights Act in 2004

Lasso (Bill Bishop from the Statesman) has a really fascinating find from the New Yorker this morning:

After the 2000 census, Texas, like most states, put through a new redistricting plan. Then, after the midterm elections, Tom DeLay, the House Majority Leader, who is from Houston, engineered passage of a revised congressional redistricting plan through the state legislature, which may mean a shift of as many as seven seats from the Democrats to the Republicans. It was unprecedented for a state to make a second redistricting plan after a post-census plan had been adopted. When the DeLay plan was submitted to the Justice Department for approval, career officials in the Voting Section produced an internal legal opinion of seventy-three pages, with seventeen hundred and fifty pages of supporting documents, arguing that the plan should be rejected as a retrogression of minority rights. However, according to people familiar with the deliberations, the political staff of the Voting Section exercised its right to overrule that decision and approved the DeLay plan, which is now in effect for the 2004 elections.
The entire New Yorker piece - which explores the ongoing rationale for the Voting Rights Act and considers what should be done when it expires in 2007 - is worth reading. It certainly doesn't paint an encouraging picture of civil rights protections from the Ashcroft Justice Department...

Posted by sarah at September 20, 2004 9:10 AM | TrackBack