Voting rights remain under assault. America has seen a resurgence of state and local measures to disenfranchise voters of color ever since the U.S. Supreme Court handed down its shameful 2013 ruling in Shelby County v. Holder. The ruling stripped away the protections of Sections 4(b) and 5 of the Voting Rights Act (VRA), which mandated federal oversight and transparency requirements from states and jurisdictions in areas of the country with the most pernicious records of repeatedly implementing schemes to deny or abridge access to the ballot. This has opened the door to new racial discrimination at every juncture of the electoral process with impunity.
The blunting of one of the strongest measures that held jurisdictions accountable for their proposed voting laws has subjected millions of minority voters to new restrictions and barriers to their right to vote. Hundreds of restrictions have been proposed and implemented in the aftermath. These restrictions include strict photo ID requirements, reduced early voting days and voting hours, narrowed windows for requesting an absentee ballot, limitations on the availability of ballots in different languages and on who can give assistance at polling places, and the closing of hundreds of polling places across America. Some states even sought to end early voting on Sundays because Black churchgoers often head to the ballot box as part of “Souls to the Polls” voting drives. Other pernicious measures, like automatic purging of voters from state voter rolls and drawing election districts in a way that curbs the power of voters of color (racial gerrymandering), have intentionally diluted the power communities of color hold in elections.