Senate overwhelmingly OKs Voting Rights Act renewal
Washington Post
Jul. 21, 2006
Charles Babington
WASHINGTON - The Senate voted 98-0 to renew key provisions of the Voting Rights
Act on Thursday, permitting the federal government to continue its broad
oversight of state voting procedures for the next quarter-century and allowing
Republicans to claim equality with Democrats in protecting minorities' clout at
the ballot box.
The act requires several states, including Arizona, to obtain Justice Department
approval before changing precinct boundaries, polling places, legislative
districts, ballot formats and other voting procedures. It also requires many
jurisdictions throughout the nation to provide bilingual ballots or interpreters
for voters whose English is not strong.
Those two provisions caused a small revolt among House Republicans last week.
GOP leaders had to scramble and rely on heavy Democratic support to defeat
proposed amendments they said would dilute the bill and prove politically
embarrassing.The law, first passed in 1965, retains near-iconic status in civil
rights circles, even though some elected officials say it is no longer needed.
GOP leaders were eager to renew it before the November elections. Unlike the
House, where some southern Republicans opposed provisions that focus on their
states, the Senate passed the bill unanimously after hours of one-sided debate
in which member after member praised leaders of the 1960s desegregation
movement.
President Bush, addressing the NAACP's annual convention while the debate was
under way, said he looked forward to signing the measure.
"A generation of Americans that has grown up in the last few decades may not
appreciate what this act has meant. Condi Rice understands what this act has
meant," Bush said, referring to the secretary of State, an African-American who
grew up in Alabama in the 1950s and '60s.
The disharmony that was evident during the House's deliberations on the act
barely touched Thursday's Senate proceedings, in which lawmakers from both
parties and all regions agreed that the Voting Rights Act remains pertinent and
necessary. Several Black House members - including Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., who
worked alongside Martin Luther King Jr. in the 1960s - were on the Senate floor
as the vote took place. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., shook hands with Rep.
Melvin Watt, D-N.C., chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, when the result
was announced.
"As we reflect on the true wrongs that existed in the 1950s and 1960s and where
those wrongs may have taken place, we owe it to history ... to pay tribute to
those who took the law and made it a reality," Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., whose
House colleagues led the opposition in the other chamber, said during the
debate.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., was a bit more grudging.
"While I support this bill, I continue to have some serious concerns with
several aspects of it," including its "extension for an extraordinary 25 years,"
he said from the floor. The defeated House amendments, he said, "would have
strengthened this bill and updated it to reflect the reality of profoundly
improved race relations" in Georgia.
The act, originally signed by President Lyndon Johnson, outlawed practices such
as poll taxes and literacy tests that many southern jurisdictions used to
depress Black voter turnout. As amended over the years, it required such
jurisdictions to obtain federal "preclearance" for an array of voting-related
practices that might have the effect of reducing minority voters' influence.
Some officials say the targeted oversight is no longer justified and is a relic
of days when southern states could not be trusted to treat all citizens justly.
But others say abuses still occur. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn.,
called the vote a major success.
"The Voting Rights Act has worked," he said. "We need to build upon that
progress by extending (its) expiring provisions."
|