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Supreme Court to decide if part of Voting Rights Act is outdated

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That prospect grew much larger Friday when the justices voted to hear a frontal attack on the law from Shelby County, Ala.

The case could also put the court in conflict with Congress, President Barack Obama and the Justice Department. In 2006, Congress in a near unanimous vote extended the Voting Rights Act and its “pre-clearance” rule for another 25 years.

The Obama Justice Department has wielded the law in the last year to block enforcement of new voter-identification laws in Texas and South Carolina and to contest cutbacks in early voting in Florida. In all three instances, the Justice Department officials said the proposed changes would have a harmful impact on black or Latino voters.

In a related case, a federal court in Washington also blocked Texas from using a new electoral map that favored Republicans. The judges, relying on the Voting Rights Act, said the GOP plan undercut the voting power of the state’s growing Latino population.

Civil rights lawyers cited these recent decisions as proof that the law is still needed. They said it helps ensure that discriminatory measures will not go into effect.

Critics of the law cite these same decisions as evidence of its unfairness. They say the newly adopted voter-identification laws in Texas and South Carolina were nearly identical to a measure adopted by Indiana and upheld by the Supreme Court in 2008.

No one — not even the challengers in the case — disputes the historic achievement of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. It “served a noble purpose, and America is a freer and better place for it,” said the lawyers for six states that support the Alabama county.

The voting rolls in most of the nation are controlled by counties, and for a century after the Civil War, officials in the South conspired to prevent African-Americans from registering and voting. Poll taxes, literacy tests and other schemes kept blacks from voting and kept political power in the hands of whites.

This happened even though the 15th Amendment had prohibited racial discrimination. In 1965, Congress was determined to make this promise into a reality. To ensure compliance, the new law said states that had employed discriminatory schemes in 1964 could not make changes in any election-related law without having it pre-cleared by the Justice Department or a panel of federal judges in Washington.

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