Voting Rights Act of 1965

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 outlawed discriminatory voting practices adopted after the Civil War. As of 2015 many key provisions have been undone. Changes to voting rights include:

  • Rolling back early voting
  • Eliminating same-day registration
  • Disqualifying ballots filed outside home precincts
  • Creating new demands for photo ID at polling places.

All key provisions have been undone by Republican congresspeople or by conservative lawsuits like Shelby County v. Holder which state that voting rights laws have “done their job and are no longer needed as race, discrimination, and voter suppression are no longer issues in America”.

In July of 2015 President Obama wrote an op-ed in response to a NewYork Times article “a Dream undone” which explains the history of the Voting Rights Act and the effort to dismantle it over the past 50 years. We suggest reading both the op-ed and the article for a better understanding of how voting rights are being dismantled in America leading up to the 2016 elections.