Voting Rights Now!

Jesse Jackson | 1/28/2022, 7:57 a.m.
For African Americans, freedom, citizenship and the right to vote are inextricably linked. With the victory of the Union in …
Jesse Jackson

For African Americans, freedom, citizenship and the right to vote are inextricably linked. With the victory of the Union in the Civil War, the Civil Rights Amendments to the Constitution -- the 13th, 14th and 15th --were passed, freeing the slaves, requiring equal justice for all, and protecting the right to vote against discrimination. Those rights were trampled by segregation, an apartheid regime shamefully ratified by a reactionary Supreme Court. It took 100 years and the civil rights movement to end segregation and pass the Voting Rights Act once more enforcing the right to vote.

Now we witness a reaction once more. Once more, Republicans seek to suppress the vote. Once more they invoke states' rights to oppose federal efforts to protect this basic right.

Once more a tong of five right-wing Supreme Court Justices - ratified by a Senate ruled by the minority - acts to weaken federal protections for the right to vote.

The question now is what can be done about it. This is not a time for the wringing of hands, for giving up. It is a time to act.

The Biden administration still has statutory authority under what is left of the Voting Rights Act - as well as constitutional authority - to protect the right to vote. As attorney Gerald Griggs argued, the president could issue Executive Orders to empower the Justice Department to send in federal monitors in states that are sued by the Justice Department for violating the right to vote. The attorney general could file suit against states violating the Voting Rights Act and order suspension of all tests and devices that abridge the right to vote. The attorney general could use the enforcement power of the Voting Rights Act to prevent state officials from undertaking voter purges or efforts to impede the casting or tabulation of the vote.

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV)

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV)

These laws are on the books now. It is time to set up a special task force to ensure that they are enforced.

But judicial action is not sufficient. In the end, we won the right to vote - and passed the Voting Rights Act in 1965 - not because the Constitution demanded it, or the courts ordered it.

We won because people marched, demonstrated, and risked their lives to demand the right to vote. The Voting Rights Act was passed in the halls of Congress in Washington, D.C., but it was won on the bridge in Selma, Alabama. Lyndon Johnson and the Congress were reacting to a demand that could no longer be ignored.

We need street heat. Joe Manchin struts around Washington rationalizing his vote against support for families with children, against paid family leave, against lower prescription drug prices, against tuition free community college. He represents one of the poorest states in the union, in dire need of investment and reform. He needs to be reminded where he comes from - and who he is supposed to represent. We need street heat with a huge march in the streets in West Virginia.

And we need street heat on the anniversary of Selma. Pundits say people don't care about the right to vote. Republicans, they argue, can filibuster it and pay no price at the polls. To change that, citizens of conscience must mobilize once more - going back to Selma - and then across the 50 states to demand that the right to vote be protected.

The stakes are very high. Minority rule mocks democracy. It is corrosive, undermining the legitimacy of our government. It is destructive, allowing the few to pocket the gold while the many get the shaft. Now is the time for the majority to make their voices heard.

Voting rights!

You can write to the Rev. Jesse Jackson in care of this newspaper or by email at jjackson@rainbowpush.org. Follow him on Twitter @RevJJackson.