The Supreme Court's Shelby ruling aids a Republican plan to
win more elections without winning support from more voters.
Voting rights are
under attack again — this time it’s the Supreme Court’s turn.
The majority’s ruling
in the Shelby County vs. Holder case gutted key Voting Rights
Act provisions at a time when minority access to the polls faces new obstacles.
As Justice Ruth Ginsburg explained and proved in her dissent, the law is working well
but remains necessary. She likened the ruling to “throwing away your umbrella
in a rainstorm because you are not getting wet.”
In what’s turning into
a tradition, tea-partying enthusiasts forced rabid Senate candidates onto the
ballot in 2012. Some of them lost what might have been easy wins when they
turned out to be too radical for the general public.
Then there’s the White
House. Despite spending
a record $1.2 billion to win the presidency, Mitt Romney and the GOP blew that
race.
Yes, the GOP did hang
onto its majority in the House of Representatives. But Republicans now only
have a 33-seat edge on the competition in that chamber, down from the 49-seat
margin they enjoyed before the 2012 elections.
Now, you might guess
these great leaders would move swiftly to rebrand the GOP to appeal to more
voters. Or distance their party from those vote-repelling tea partiers. Well,
guess again. They’ve settled on a different strategy: cheating.
An earlier Supreme
Court ruling helped make this new approach possible. Remember thatCitizens
United decision? It allowed corporations for the first time to buy
directly into elections with unlimited contributions.
The Republicans found
out in November, when Romney outspent Barack Obama by more than $100 million,
that it will take more than gobs of corporate cash to win big.
But money is only one
GOP angle. Another is fraud. No, no, not that Republicans will vote twice or
anything so pedestrian.
Instead, they accuse
poor people of voting fraudulently, and thereupon get legislatures to pass laws
making voting a serious hassle if you’re not part of the in-group with a
government-issued photo ID. Republican operatives are also fond of flyers and
announcements that threaten insecure new citizens and poorly educated voters
with arrest if their papers are not exactly in order.
Another voting
deterrence tool is inconvenience. Other nations — and many states — have long
worked to increase polling places, lengthen voting hours, stimulate mail
balloting, and simplify procedures.
Contrarily, numerous
Republican-controlled states are seeking to reverse all those trends. The GOP’s
theory is simple enough: We know who poorer, less mobile people tend to vote
for, and it isn’t us. Hey, let’s make it as hard for them to vote as we can.
Yet another tactic is
gerrymandering. State legislatures normally draw boundaries not only for their
own districts but for Congress as well. In some states, lawmakers exert this
power mainly to protect their own personal seats.
Ginsburg calls these
tactics “second-generation barriers to minority voting.” Thanks to that shiny
new Supreme Court ruling, they’re now easier to pull off.
Now the Republican
Party, wherever it’s in charge, is going further. It’s crowding Democratic
voters, especially around urban centers, into a few contorted pockets. This
practice spreads the Republican voters around, helping the GOP accumulate
additional “safe” legislative and congressional seats.
The GOP’s creative
redistricting explains why President Obama won Wisconsin by more than 200,000
votes while Democrats only carried three of the state’s eight congressional
districts.
There’s more. Coming
soon to a gerrymandered state near you: an attack on presidential elections.
Here’s how this trick
works: Each state gets to determine how its own electoral votes will be
allocated — either by a statewide “winner-take-all” system or by congressional
district. Republican-gerrymandered states are moving quickly to distribute
their electoral votes by congressional district.
Isn’t that convenient?
Even if the Republican Party doesn’t need any more help from the Supreme Court,
our democracy sure does.
Emily Schwartz Greco is the managing editor of OtherWords, a non-profit
national editorial service run by the Institute for Policy Studies. OtherWords columnist
William A. Collins is a former state representative and a former mayor of
Norwalk, Connecticut. OtherWords.org