Supreme Court: How the justices revived Jim Crow voter suppression - Vox
A podcast
Carol Anderson explains what happens when our voting rights laws start to crumble.
In 1965, the United States began a grand experiment: We decided to finally have free and fair elections.
The Voting Rights Act, and especially a provision of that act requiring states with a history of racism to “preclear” new voting laws with federal officials before those laws could take effect, may be the most effective civil rights law in American history. On the day the Voting Rights Act was signed, only about 5 percent of Black Mississippians were registered to vote.
Two years later, that number was 60 percent.
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