Friend,
Although President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation in January 1863, it wasn’t until June 19th, 1865 that enslaved Black people in Galveston, Texas learned of their freedom. A
celebration of Black resilience, independence, and community, our country now officially commemorates June 19th, or “Juneteenth,” as the day when the nation’s last enslaved people received the news of their long overdue emancipation.
Today, Black people continue to fight for the rights of full citizenship, including leading the charge to break down barriers to voting.
Key moments in the history of Black voting rights:
1870: While the
Fifteenth Amendment gave Black men the right to vote, most Black people were still barred from voting through Jim Crow laws and practices defended by racist judges who were complicit in upholding discriminatory practices, as well as by widespread violence and intimidation. Communities most impacted by environmental injustice are often the same communities that have historically been denied access to the ballot box, including communities of color, rural communities, low-wealth communities, people with disabilities, youth, and elderly people.
1965: Ninety-five years later, Congress passed the
Voting Rights Act (VRA) to ensure the voting rights promised by the Fifteenth Amendment were being enforced, finally providing meaningful federal protections against discriminatory voting practices.
2013: Ten years ago, the
Supreme Court gutted a key provision of the VRA in the landmark case Shelby County v Holder, which spurred an avalanche of voter suppression legislation across the country. In this case, right-wing justices (led by Chief Justice Roberts, who is known for his anti-voting rights agenda) effectively eliminated a core VRA protection that required jurisdictions with a history of discrimination to receive federal authorization before changing their voting procedures.
Within hours of the decision, Texas, Mississippi, and Alabama announced strict voter ID laws. Less than two months later, North Carolina followed suit and passed HB 589, which, in addition to strict voter ID requirements, restricted early voting and pre-registration, limited the authority of county election boards, and eliminated same day registration and annual voter registration drives.
Today, the fight continues in the states:
This year marks the 10 year anniversary of
Shelby County v Holder and
Black voters are still feeling its impact, as well as the impacts of other detrimental voting rights rulings.
In the 10 years since the Shelby County decision, jurisdictions previously covered by preclearance have purged an astonishing number of people from their voting rolls. An investigation by the Brennan Center estimated that
over 360,000 voters were improperly purged in Texas. In Georgia, that number was 1.5 million.
It’s not just voter roll purges;
attacks on people of color’s voting rights have come from every direction. Over the last 10 years, court decisions at the local and federal levels have significantly weakened voting protections. While SCOTUS’ recent decision
Allen v Milligan did not weaken the Voting Rights Act any further, the Court’s track record on voting is abysmal. In 2023 alone,
legislators in 45 states have introduced at least 322 anti-voting measures that would disproportionately affect people of color, according to the Brennan Center.
How do we fight these racist attacks on voting rights?
With the Supreme Court repeatedly attacking the federal VRA, some states have taken matters into their own hands.
Connecticut, California, New York, Oregon, Virginia, and Washington have all passed state Voting Rights Acts, with the Connecticut VRA as the most recent passage in June 2023 and leading as the most comprehensive state VRA in the country. New Jersey, Vermont, Michigan, and Maine have similar legislation in the works.
Those fighting for the protections guaranteed by state VRAs continue to bring locally tailored solutions for upholding voting rights and protecting historically disenfranchised communities from voter discrimination in their communities.
We’ve made incredible progress, but we still have a long way to go.
In order to continue moving toward a more equitable and just future for everyone, we must ensure voting rights for all people. Targeted attacks on the voting rights of Black people not only lead to the exclusion of other communities of color, but are ultimately an attack on democracy itself.
At the federal level, we must pass:
Onward,
LCV Democracy Team