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Voting Rights
The right to vote, and to have one's vote accurately and fairly counted, is as fundamental a right as we have in this country. In 1965, Congress passed the Voting Rights Act, one of the most effective civil rights laws ever enacted. The Act immediately outlawed the worst Jim Crow laws in the South, such as literacy tests and other devices that kept black citizens out of the voting booth.
Today, however, the hard won gains of the civil rights movement, and the Voting Rights Act, are in danger of being extinguished. It is now abundantly clear, for instance, that this precious right was repeatedly violated in the much contested Presidential election of 2000. In the state of Florida and at polling booths across the country, flaws in the voting system disproportionately affected people of color, effectively excluding them from the voting process.
"Our constitutional democracy rests on certain core principles," says the ACLU’s Nadine Strossen. "Every vote should be counted accurately, every vote should be counted equally, and no one should be denied the right to vote based on the color of his or her skin."
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The ACLU's Voting Rights Project is working to renew and restore the rights of racial and language minorities in three crucial sections of the VRA set to expire in 2007. Learn more at VotingRights.org |
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