Order Code 95-896
The Voting Rights Act of 1965,
As Amended: Its History
and Current Issues
Updated June 12, 2008
Garrine P. Laney
Analyst in American National Government
Domestic Social Policy Division

The Voting Rights Act of 1965, As Amended:
Its History and Current Issues
Summary
Several bills have been introduced in the 110th Congress concerning the Voting
Rights Act of 1965 (VRA) that would rename the short title of the act, and address
its bilingual provisions and issues of deceptive practices and voter intimidation
during elections. H.R. 745 and S. 188 would rename the short title of the Fannie Lou
Hamer, Rosa Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and
Amendments Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-246), which was enacted on July 27, 2006. H.R.
745 would add the names of Cesar E. Chavez and Barbara C. Jordan to the act; while
S. 188, in addition to these two names, would add the names of William C.
Velasquez and Dr. Hector P. Garcia. The Senate passed S. 188, as amended, on
February 15, 2007. H.R. 5971, H.R. 769 and S. 1335, among other provisions, would
change the bilingual requirements of the VRA.
H.R. 1281 and S. 453 would address allegations of deliberate dissemination of
false information with the intent of intimidating persons and keeping them from
voting. Among other provisions, these bills would prohibit such practices and
penalize violators. The House passed H.R. 1281 on June 25, 2007. The Senate
Judiciary Committee reported S. 453 (S.Rept. 110-191), as amended in the nature of
a substitute, on October 4, 2007.
Congress passed the VRA in 1965 in response to widespread evidence of
disfranchisement of black citizens in several southern states. This act protects
citizens’ right to vote primarily by forbidding covered states from using tests of any
kind to determine eligibility to vote, by requiring these states to obtain federal
approval before enacting any election laws, and by assigning federal officials to
monitor the registration process in certain localities. Since passage of the VRA,
Congress has amended and extended coverage of the act in 1970, 1975, 1982, and
1992. Most recently, Congress amended the VRA in 2006 to, among other
provisions, reauthorize its temporary provisions for 25 years and to allow reasonable
expert fees and other litigation expenses. It also modified provisions of the act
relating to the assignment of election observers and examiners.
Other major provisions of the VRA include extending the act’s coverage to
jurisdictions across the nation, requiring covered jurisdictions to submit any proposed
voting procedure or election law change to the U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia or to the U.S. Attorney General for preclearance; establishing conditions
by which a state or political subdivision may be released from preclearance of
election law changes; authorizing the appointment of election observers in covered
jurisdictions during federal elections; allowing a private citizen to challenge in court
discriminatory practices and elections procedures; requiring bilingual assistance for
certain voters whose language is other than English; and prohibiting intimidation of
any qualified person from voting.
This report also addresses allegations of voting irregularities and of violations
of the VRA during the presidential election of 2000. This report will be updated
when legislative activity occurs.

Contents
Recent Developments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Right to Vote . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Constitutional Disfranchisement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Other Disfranchisement Tactics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Early Supreme Court Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Civil Rights Acts of 1957, 1960 and 1964 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
The Voting Rights Act of 1965 (P.L. 89-110) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Coverage Formula (Section 4(b)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Suspension of Tests and Devices (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Preclearance of Changes in Election Laws (Section 5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Laws Affecting Elections That Require Preclearance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Altering Methods of Election . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Federal Examiners for Voter Registration (Sections 6 and 7) . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Federal Election Observers (Section 8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Release from Coverage (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Prohibition of English-Language Literacy Requirement for Citizens
Educated in American Schools (Section 4(e)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
General Prohibition of Discriminatory Voting Laws (Section 2) . . . . . . . . 12
Civil Actions to Enforce Compliance (Section 12(d)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Prohibits Intimidation of Any Qualified Person from Voting (Section 11) . 13
Protection of Paper Ballot or Any Official Voting Record (Section 12(b)) . 13
The Voting Rights Amendments of 1970 (P.L. 91-285) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Extension of Duration of the Act (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Expansion of Coverage of the Act (Section 4(b)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Ban on Literacy Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Residence Requirements (Section 202) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
The Eighteen-Year-Old Vote (Section 302) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
The Voting Rights Amendments of 1975 (P.L. 94-73) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Extension of Duration of Act (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Nationwide Ban on Literacy Tests (Section 201) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Extension of Coverage to Protect Language Minorities (Section 4(b)) . . . . 18
Jurisdictions Covered With Respect to Language Minorities Subject to
Special Provisions of the Act (Sections 4(a), 5, 6, and 8) . . . . . . . . . . 18
Duration of Coverage (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Bilingual-Election Requirement (Section 203) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Addition of Language-Minority Status to Section 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Compilation of Registration and Voting Statistics (Section 207) . . . . . . . . 20
The Voting Rights Amendments of 1982 (P.L. 97-205) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Extension of Duration of the Act (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Amended Conditions for Release from Coverage (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . 22
Separate Release for Political Subdivisions (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Reconsideration and Termination of the Act (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

Extension of Bilingual-Election Requirement (Section 203) . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Amendment to Judicial Standard of Proof Under Section 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
The Voting Rights Amendments of 1992 (P.L. 102-344) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Debate on Bilingual Voting Assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Reauthorization and Modification of Section 203 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Cost of Bilingual Election Assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Use of Language Assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Key Provisions of the Voting Rights Language Assistance Act of 1992 . . . 32
Bilingual Voting Materials Requirement (Section 203, (b)) . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Covered States and Political Subdivisions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Current Major Provisions of the Act . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Coverage (Section 4(b)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Suspension of Tests and Devices (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Preclearance of Election-Law Changes (Section 5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Federal Election Observers (Section 8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Conditions for Release From Coverage (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Termination of Coverage Provisions (Section 4(a)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Prohibitions of English-Language Literacy Requirement for Citizens
Educated in American Schools (Section 4(e)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Prohibits Intimidation of Any Qualified Person from Voting (Section 11) . 35
Bilingual-Election Requirement (Section 203) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Litigation Expenses (Section 14(e)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Nationwide Literacy Test Ban (Section 201) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Registration and Voting Statistics (Section 207) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Limitation of Residence Requirements for Voting (Section 202) . . . . . . . . 37
General Prohibition of Discriminatory Voting Laws (Section 2) . . . . . . . . 37
Civil Actions to Enforce Compliance (Section 12(d)) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Presidential Election of 2000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
NAACP Hearing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Florida Task Force . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Federal Action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Media Review . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Lawsuits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Policy Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
107th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
108th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
109th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Selected Provisions of the Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks, and Coretta
Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and Amendments
Act of 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
110th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Bilingual Provisions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Modification of the Short Title of the Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa
Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization
and Amendments Act of 2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51

Deceptive Practices and Voter Intimidation Prevention . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
Committee Action on H.R. 1281 and S. 453 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54

The Voting Rights Act of 1965, As
Amended: Its History and Current Issues
Recent Developments
H.R. 5971, American Elections Act of 2008 (Heller), which was introduced
on May 6, 2008, would require that in elections for federal office ballots be printed
only in English, effective November 2008. The bill would amend Section 203 of the
Voting Rights Act (which requires covered jurisdictions to provide election language
assistance for certain limited-English citizens) to require covered jurisdictions to
provide election language assistance only for American Indians or Alaskan Natives.
See section “110th Congress” later in this report.
Introduction
Right to Vote
13th Amendment. Prior to the Civil War, the franchise was denied to nearly
everyone except white male property owners who were over 21 years of age. After
the War, the 38th Congress proposed the 13th Amendment to the state legislatures; it
became a part of the Constitution in December 1865. The 13th Amendment prohibits
slavery in the United States and gives Congress power to enforce this article. The
39th Congress sought to expand suffrage to citizens in the United States. With
passage of the First Reconstruction Act of 1867, it required former confederate states
to write new constitutions that guaranteed the right of all males to vote, irrespective
of race. To insulate its efforts from partisan politics and presidential vetoes, Congress
turned to constitutional amendments. In June 1866, it proposed the 14th Amendment
to the state legislatures.
14th Amendment. The 14th Amendment contains five sections. Section 1
prohibits the states from denying citizens of the United States equality before the law.
Section 2 was devised to prevent the southern states from using literacy and property
tests to keep African Americans from voting while retaining their full population-
based representation in the House of Representatives. It provides that when the right
to vote is denied to any 21-year old male resident of a state at any election for
electors for President and Vice President of the United States, congressional
representatives, the executive and judicial officers of the state or members of the state
legislature, that state’s congressional representation shall be reduced in proportion
to the number of male citizens who were denied the right to vote. The exception for
Section 2 is if the voter has been guilty of rebellion or other crime. Section 3 bars
persons who voluntarily participated in the rebellion against the United States from
election to any federal office, civil or military, until Congress, by a vote of two-thirds

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majority in each House, removes such disability. Section 4 prohibits payment of the
Confederate debt. In Section 5, Congress is empowered to enforce provisions of this
article through appropriate legislation. On July 28, 1868, the 14th Amendment
became a part of the Constitution.
15th Amendment. The 40th Congress proposed the 15th Amendment to the
state legislatures in 1869. The 15th Amendment protects the right of male suffrage
without regard to “race, color, or previous condition of servitude” and empowers
Congress to enforce this article. In March 1870, the 15th Amendment became a part
of the Constitution.

From 1867 to 1875, Congress passed election laws that guaranteed the right to
vote in national and state elections and established federal supervision of election and
voter registration. To protect the political, legal and social equality of all Americans,
Congress passed civil rights legislation that contained provisions for the imposition
of fines and criminal penalties on those convicted of conspiring to deprive citizens
of their civil rights. As a consequence of these laws, black participation in the
political process rose dramatically. For example, during this nine-year period nearly
70% of the eligible black voters were registered; 10 blacks were elected to the House
and two to the U.S. Senate. Besides electing blacks to office, black voters heavily
influenced the outcome of local, state, and national elections throughout the South.1
Most southern whites opposed the enfranchisement of former slaves. Some
resorted to a number of tactics to discourage or stop blacks from participating in the
political process, such as fraud, violence (including murder), and economic
blackmail. The Compromise of 1877 essentially ended Reconstruction, as
withdrawal of federal troops from the South allowed those who supported the
disfranchisement of blacks to assume control of most state governments. These
legislatures used creative measures to make voting difficult. They passed bills to
reduce the numbers of black voters by requiring them to travel great distances to
voting precincts and designed complex balloting procedures that amounted to literacy
tests. Challenges to registration rulings were heard by local officials who were
unlikely to be sympathetic.2
A South Carolina law of 1882, for example, required that special ballots and
boxes be placed in every polling place for each office on the ballot, and that voters
put their ballots in the correct boxes. No one was allowed to speak to a voter, and
1 U.S. Congress, House, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee #5, Voting Rights.
Hearings on H.R. 6400
, 89th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1965), pp. 3-4; U.S.
Congress. Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on the Constitution, Voting
Rights Act. Report
, (at head of title: committee print), 97th Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington:
GPO, 1982), p. 7; John Hope Franklin and Alfred A. Moss, Jr., From Slavery to Freedom:
A History of Negro Americans
(New York: McGraw-Hill, 1988), pp. 216-223. For a fuller
discussion of the Reconstruction Period, see also: Foner, Reconstruction, America’s
Unfinished Revolution, 1863-1877
.
2 Franklin, From Slavery to Freedom, pp. 255-258, 227-231, 235-238.

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if he failed to find the correct box, his vote was thrown out.3 All of these tactics —
both legal and illegal — combined to minimize the presence of blacks in the electoral
process. But some southern whites were uncomfortable with the resort to fraud,
murder, bribery, and theft to disfranchise most blacks. They sought a permanent
legal way to limit black voting.4
Constitutional Disfranchisement
During the last decade of the 19th century, a number of southern states held
constitutional conventions to permanently disfranchise black Americans. Although
delegates at these conventions favored repeal of the 15th Amendment, they feared the
reaction of the rest of the nation. They need not have though, for the political climate
of the country, both north and south, seemed to favor limiting black participation in
the political process (though for different reasons). Federal enforcement of election
laws and protection of citizens were being withdrawn. The Supreme Court, in 1883,
narrowly interpreted provisions of civil rights laws passed during Reconstruction or
declared them unconstitutional. Congress repealed many sections of the Enforcement
Act. These rulings effectively removed the federal government from the business of
protecting the civil rights of all Americans for decades.5
At its constitutional convention of 1890 (called for the express purpose of
removing blacks from the voting booth), Mississippi devised a system that effectively
disfranchised most blacks and was variously adopted by other southern states.
Because delegates at the convention feared voters would reject the new constitution,
they did not submit it for popular approval; instead the convention, itself, approved,
promulgated and declared the constitution to be in effect. The Mississippi
constitution of 1890 differed from its predecessor in that it replaced the six months
residency requirement with a two-year one; imposed a literacy test for prospective
voters, as well as a property requirement of three-hundred dollars; introduced an
annual poll tax of two dollars; and disqualified convicts.6
Virginia’s election code in 1894 required that registration and poll tax
certificates be shown at the polls, and that the names of candidates be printed on the
ballot by office not party. This was an extremely confusing arrangement for barely
literate and illiterate voters. Voters had a maximum of two-and-a-half minutes to
vote, if others were waiting in line. As a consequence of this code many black and
white illiterate residents were disfranchised.7
In 1898, Louisiana introduced a new device into its constitution, the
“grandfather clause.” It required an addition to the permanent registration list of the
names of all male persons whose fathers and grandfathers were qualified to vote on
3 Ibid., pp. 231-235.
4 Ibid., pp. 232-235.
5 Ibid., pp. 228-231, 238.
6 Ibid., pp. 235-238.
7 Ibid., p. 232.

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January 1, 1867. Since blacks were denied the franchise in 1867, none of them
qualified under this provision. The Supreme Court in 1915 declared the “grandfather
clause” unconstitutional.8
All but two southern states used literacy tests as voting limitation devices;
however, none of the new constitutional provisions mentioned race, that is, they were
racially neutral. But the impact of these laws was devastating for blacks. For
instance, in Mississippi, in 1867, 70% of eligible blacks were registered to vote; by
1889, only 9%. In Louisiana, in 1896, 130,334 blacks were registered to vote, by
1900, only 5,320. Alabama in 1900 had 181,471 black males of voting age, but after
the new constitution was adopted only 3,000 registered.9
Other Disfranchisement Tactics
Although the vast majority of African-American voters were disfranchised by
1910, some continued to vote, causing concern for some southern whites. In an
address on the right of suffrage before Congress in 1927, Senator Cole Blease of
South Carolina reflected the political climate for African Americans in his state. He
boldly admitted that the purpose of the 1895 South Carolina constitution was to
disfranchise African Americans. Concerning the presidential election of 1922, he
stated, “I think Mr. [Calvin ] Coolidge received 1100 votes in my state. I do not
know where he got them. I was astonished to know they were cast and shocked to
know they were counted.”10 Unfair examinations, intimidation, and delaying
registration until the deadline had passed were other tactics employed to effectively
remove African Americans from the ballot box.
In Florida, payment of the poll tax automatically carried registration with it, but
other methods were used to keep African Americans from voting. In the 1920s, an
African American who attempted to vote might discover that his name was not on the
voters list, that the name or address on his certificate differed from that on the voters
list, or that his name through oversight had been placed on the white list — all of
which were technicalities that could disqualify him from voting. His only recourse
was the courts, the expense of which he would have to bear, and even if a court ruled
in his favor (which was unlikely) the ruling would not be timely.11
African Americans who tried to register to vote in New Orleans, Louisiana,
complained that ignorant whites employed at registration offices were empowered
to decide whether an individual had correctly interpreted the constitution of the
8 Jack Greenberg, Race Relations and American Law (New York: Columbia University
Press, 1959), p. 139.
9 Ibid., pp. 264-267; Patricia Gurin, Shirley Hatchett, and James S. Jackson, Hope and
Independence, Blacks’ Response to Electoral and Party Politics
(New York: Russell Sage
Foundation, 1989), p. 23.
10 Congressional Record, vol. 68, part 5, March 2, 1927, pp. 5361-5363.
11 Paul Lewinson, Race, Class, and Party, a History of Negro Suffrage and White Politics
in the South
(New York: Russell & Russell, Inc., 1963), p. 119.

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United States; if the individual were African American, the registrars would declare
that his answer was incorrect.12
A teacher in North Carolina reported that when she attempted to register to vote,
she was told that her request to vote at three places had been reported and she was
being watched by hostile observers and other such statements that implied she could
become a victim of violence.13
Early Supreme Court Cases
These laws stood for decades. Eleven southern states determined that the state
political party nominating process was a private action and, therefore, that party
officials could legally restrict participation in the primary to whites only (thus the
name “white primary”). Since the winner of the primary in a one-party state, was in
essence elected to office, African Americans were eliminated from the electoral
process.14 A suit was filed in Texas, Smith v. Allwright,15 challenging the
constitutionality of the white primary; in 1944, the Supreme Court declared the white
primary unconstitutional.
Generally, southern legislatures developed other means to minimize blacks’
access to the voting booth. In July 1957, the Alabama legislature, with Act No. 140,
redrew the boundaries of the city of Tuskegee to exclude Tuskegee Institute (now
Tuskegee University) and a majority of the nearly 5,400 black residents. As a
consequence, thousands of black residents and nearly all blacks who were registered
to vote could no longer participate in Tuskegee municipal elections. A resident,
Charles G. Gomillion, in Gomillion v. Lightfoot16 charged that the act violated both
the 14th Amendment (the equal protection clause) and the 15th Amendment. This
was an important case because two issues were involved — voting rights for blacks
and redistricting by state legislatures.17
In the past, Supreme Court rulings appeared to give state legislatures absolute
control over setting municipal boundaries. In 1957, as the Court began to dismantle
barriers to black political participation, it considered the redistricting issue inherent
in Gomillion v. Lightfoot. Although Act No. 140 did not mention race, it was clear
that its intent was racially discriminatory. Yet, on appeal, the Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals, by a 3-2 vote, upheld a lower court’s dismissal of the case on the grounds
that it lacked “authority or jurisdiction” to declare the law void. Dissenting Judge
John Brown wrote that the fact that act No. 140 did not discriminate on its face was
12 Ibid., p. 117.
13 Ibid., p. 119.
14 Jack Bass, Unlikely Heroes (New York: Simon and Schuster), p. 266.
15 321 U.S. 649 (1944).
16 270 F. 2d 594, 611.
17 Bass, Unlikely Heroes, pp. 97-100.

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insignificant; the act “effectively disfranchised all but four or five black voters.”18
Brown also considered the fact that Macon county (the county in which Tuskegee
was located) had been without a board of registrars for 18 months and that the state
legislature was trying to abolish the county through a constitutional amendment.
Since most eligible whites were already registered, they had no real need for a
registrar. But thousands of blacks were not registered and were unable to register in
Tuskegee for lack of a board of registrars. Therefore, the traditional method of
correcting political abuse at the polls was denied blacks. Consequently, Judge Brown
found the law unconstitutional. He wrote that “the business of judging in
constitutional fields is one of searching for the spirit of the Constitution in terms of
the present as well as the past, not the past alone.” On appeal, the Supreme Court
agreed with Judge Brown and ruled unanimously that act No. 140 violated the 15th
amendment.19
Civil Rights Acts of 1957, 1960 and 1964
Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1957 to protect black voting rights
through the judicial process. By provisions of the act, the Attorney General was
authorized to bring lawsuits to protect equal voting rights, and persons who
disobeyed court orders prohibiting discrimination in voting could be held in criminal
contempt. Further, the act authorized appointment of another Assistant Attorney
General to head a Civil Rights Division in the Department of Justice. It provided that
special three-judge federal district courts be convened, with jurisdiction to hear civil
rights cases taken out of state courts by the Department of Justice. A six-member
Commission on Civil Rights was created to gather information on discrimination in
voting and to issue annual reports.20
The Commission on Civil Rights held hearings throughout the nation and
discovered that some registrars discriminated against blacks for racial reasons.
Because of the length of legal hearings and the delaying but legal tactics employed
during lawsuits, the Civil Rights Act of 1957 was mostly ineffective. After three
years only four cases were heard and decided. It was felt that the law needed
strengthening to prevent evasive measures by registrars and produce more timely
rulings; so, in 1960, Congress passed another civil rights law.
The Civil Rights Act of 1960 sought to fill some of the loopholes in the 1957
Act. It provided that if a registrar resigned after complaints had been filed, the
proceeding could be instituted against the state. It authorized federal referees to
investigate complaints of voting discrimination and to register qualified voters. The
act required voting records to be preserved for 22 months following any primary,
special, or general election at which there were candidates for federal office; and it
18 Ibid., p. 107.
19 Ibid., pp. 106-109.
20 P.L. 83-315; 71 Stat. 634.

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empowered a federal district court judge to issue a registration order, and to replace
state registrars with federal officials.21
These measures were found inadequate, in part because the individual black
citizen, operating in a hostile environment, had to be the primary initiator of legal
action. In a report prepared in 1963, the Commission on Civil Rights concluded that
this was a role that the federal government should assume. Federal efforts to ban
racial discrimination relied heavily on litigation. The Commission rejected this
litigious approach because it was time consuming and did not increase black
registration significantly.22
Most national political leaders remained committed to a litigious, low-profile
approach to registering blacks in the South until violence erupted in Birmingham,
Alabama, in 1963, and Philadelphia, Mississippi, in 1964. After the violence,
Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which contains provisions that
attempted to have three-judge federal district courts hear cases more quickly, and
allow for temporary voting registrars. It forbids local officials to apply standards to
some voter registrants (e.g., black registrants) that had not been applied to others
(e.g., white registrants) already found qualified to vote. The act also provides that in
any voting rights court case there shall be a presumption of literacy for all voter
applicants who have completed the sixth grade in an accredited, English-speaking
school.
These provisions proved ineffective as well. Sometimes, after lengthy litigation
caused an election law to be judicially invalidated as discriminatory, the state or local
jurisdiction would pass and enforce a different law or regulation designed to
circumvent the court order. The Justice Department called for a “new approach” that
would go “beyond the tortuous, often-ineffective pace of litigation.”23 In drafting
another voting rights bill, it sought to impose constraints on the use of literacy tests
and other devices that denied blacks access to the ballot box, and to establish an
administrative presence of federal marshals in the southern states to assist blacks in
their efforts to vote. The outbreak of violence in Selma, Alabama, as a result of a
black voter registration drive, aided the Department in its efforts. On August 6,
1965, the Voting Rights Act was signed into law.24 It created administrative
remedies that automatically became applicable to certain jurisdictions under a
statutory coverage formula, without the need for prolonged litigation. In South
Carolina v. Katzenbach
,25 the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the
Voting Rights Act.
21 P.L. 86-449; 74 Stat. 86.
22 U.S. Congress, House, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee No. 5, Voting Rights,
hearings on H.R. 6400, 89th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1965), pp. 121-128; 258,
286-288. (Statements of Reverend Theodore M. Hesburgh, President of the Civil Rights
Commission and William L. Taylor, Staff Director-Designate of the Civil Rights
Commission.)
23 House Subcommittee No. 5, pp. 5, 9.
24 P.L. 89-110; 79 Stat. 437.
25 383 U.S. 301 (1966).

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The Voting Rights Act of 1965 (P.L. 89-110)
Congress passed the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to protect the voting rights of
American citizens. The act was amended in 1970, 1975, 1982 and 1992 and the
following provisions reflect those changes.26
Major provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965:
(1) Prohibit the enactment of any election law to deny or abridge voting rights
on account of race or color;
(2) Suspend all literacy tests in states and counties that used them and where less
than 50% of adults had voted in 1964;
(3) Prohibit the enforcement of new voting rules or practices until federal
reviewers determine if their use would continue voting discrimination;
(4) Assign federal examiners to list qualified applicants to vote and to serve as
poll watchers;
(5) Authorize the Attorney General to institute civil actions to seek enforcement
of the act; and
(6) Prohibits any person acting under color of law or otherwise from
intimidating or denying any eligible person from voting.
Coverage Formula (Section 4(b))
Federal intervention in state regulation of the electoral process was restricted to
jurisdictions in which there was evidence that voting discrimination had occurred.
A coverage formula was adopted to determine which states and political subdivisions
of states would be covered by the act. It was assumed that low registration and
voting statistics in jurisdictions requiring literacy tests and devices resulted from the
discriminatory application of those tests and devices. Therefore, according to the
formula established in Section 4(b),27 any states or political subdivisions are covered
if they used any test or device as a condition for voter registration on November 1,
1964, and if either less than 50% of age-eligible persons living there were registered
to vote on that date or less than 50% of such persons voted in the Presidential
election of that year. The following jurisdictions were covered by the “triggering”
provisions of Section 4(b) in 1965: Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South
Carolina, Virginia, 39 counties in North Carolina, and specified counties in Arizona
and Hawaii.28
26 In order to provide a more logical order of presentation, the following summary does not
follow the numerical sequence of sections of the Voting Rights Act. Thus, the summary
rearranges the subject matter as follows: first, the rationale for deciding which jurisdictions
are to be subject to the act; second, the requirements imposed on covered jurisdictions; third,
how these jurisdictions may be released from coverage. Other sections of the act are placed
after these. As a result of this rearrangement, parts of the act in Title I are taken up after
parts in Titles II and III. In order to avoid confusion, title numbers have been omitted.
Sections numbered below 200 are in Title I; those in the 200’s are in Title II; and those in
the 300’s are in Title III. The summary includes only the fundamental sections of the act;
other sections are omitted.
27 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.
28 The Justice Department publishes the list of covered jurisdictions in 28 C.F.R. Pt. 51.54,
(continued...)

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Suspension of Tests and Devices (Section 4(a))
The act forbids the use of all literacy tests as well as any other “device,” such
as a voucher requirement, as a condition for voter registration in states and political
subdivisions of states that fall under the coverage criteria of Section 4(b).29
Preclearance of Changes in Election Laws (Section 5)
With Section 4(a) the framers of the Voting Rights Act sought to stop the
practice of discouraging black registration and voting. But they also realized that
covered jurisdictions could limit the effectiveness of the black vote in other ways, for
instance, by locating polling places in white but not in black neighborhoods, and by
gerrymandering electoral districts in such a way that blacks would not comprise a
majority in any electoral district. Section 530 is intended to prevent enforcement of
any election law made after November 1, 1964 with racially discriminatory effect.31
The act prohibits a covered state or political subdivision from putting into effect
“any voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or standard, practice, or procedure
with respect to voting different from that in force or effect on November 1, 1964”
before first submitting the change in election law for “preclearance” either to the
Justice Department or to the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia (in an
action for a declaratory judgment) in order for the Department or the Court to
determine if such law would deny or abridge the right to vote on account of race or
color.32 In order to object to an election law change submitted for federal
preclearance, the Justice Department or the U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia need not find that the jurisdiction intended to discriminate against minority
voters; it need only determine that implementation of the law would, in fact, result
in denying or abridging voting rights. If the Justice Department does not object to
the proposed law within 60 days after a jurisdiction submits it for review, then the
jurisdiction may put the law into effect.
Laws Affecting Elections That Require Preclearance
Section 533 requires federal preclearance of every change in election laws, not
only laws affecting procedural requirements that individuals must observe in order
28 (...continued)
Appendix.
29 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.
30 42 U.S.C. § 1973c.
31 U.S. Congress, House, Committee on Rules, To Extend The Voting Rights Act of 1965
With Respect to the Discriminatory Use of Tests and Devices
, hearings on H.R. 4249, 91st
Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1969), p. 3, (Statement of Representative Celler,
Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee).
32 42 U.S.C. § 1973c.
33 42 U.S.C. § 1973c.

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to register and vote, but laws setting up electoral systems as well. Between 1965 and
1980 (Section 5 was continued when the act was amended in 1970, 1975 and 1982)
in the preclearance process the Justice Department objected more times to three of
these ways than to any others — methods of election, urban annexations, and
electoral redistricting. These methods were objectionable because they would have
resulted in abridging or “diluting” the voting power of blacks, Hispanics or other
protected minority voters.
Altering Methods of Election
Changing from Single-Member Districts to At-Large Voting. One
objectionable way of altering the method of election was changing from election by
single-member districts or precincts to at-large voting. For example, in a majority-
white city governed by several commissioners, if each commissioner were elected in
a different district, and if blacks, as a minority in the city as a whole, nevertheless
comprised the majority in one or more districts, then black voters would be in a
position to elect one or more candidates of their own choice. But, if commissioners
were elected at-large, it would usually mean that all voters in the city as a whole
would vote for each commissioner position, and consequently, that the white majority
in the city as a whole could elect every one of the nine commissioners. Thus, a
change in method of election from election by single-member districts to at-large
elections could dissolve any black majorities in separate districts and allow the white
city-wide majority to decide the entire outcome of elections for the city commission.
It is this kind of “dilution” of black voting power to which the Justice
Department often has objected. It should be noted that at-large elections in white-
majority jurisdictions are not necessarily discriminatory. They may become so in
certain circumstances, however, where racial antagonism and racial bloc voting
characterize the jurisdiction, or where socioeconomic issues such as unemployment
or poverty divide a jurisdiction along racial lines.
Urban Annexations. The Justice Department found that urban annexations
also may abridge black voting power. For instance, if a majority-black city annexed
a largely white suburban area, the enlarged city might change from majority-black to
majority-white. If the city conducted elections for municipal offices at-large, and if
the addition of suburban whites gave whites a city-wide majority, then black voters
might lose the chance to elect their own candidates to any municipal office. This
development occurred with the annexation of suburban areas by Petersburg, Virginia,
in 1971; the black percentage of the population changed from 55% to 46%. Because
Petersburg conducted at-large elections for the City Council the Justice Department
believed that the annexation would have diluted black voting power. Petersburg was
allowed to annex suburban areas only on the condition that it change from at-large
elections to elections by single-member districts.34
Redistricting. Changing the boundaries of single-member electoral districts
is another electoral alteration that the Justice Department determined may result in
34 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, The Voting Rights Act: Ten Years After (Washington:
U.S. Commission of Civil Rights, 1975), pp. 304-305.

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lessening the effectiveness of the black vote. In a jurisdiction with concentrations of
black voters, such concentrations constitute potential majorities to elect candidates
responsive to the needs of the black community. If district boundaries are drawn to
divide concentrations of black voters into adjoining, majority-white areas, black
majorities may be liquidated. Conversely, boundaries of single-member electoral
districts may be drawn in such a way as to minimize the number of black-majority
districts by placing black voters in as few districts as possible.
It has been suggested that implementation of Section 5 by the Justice
Department has fostered the expectation that fair electoral processes should result in
racially proportional representation among elected officials.35 That is, blacks should
be able to elect officeholders in numbers fairly proportional to the percentage that
they comprise of the entire electorate. But Section 5 does not establish a right to
proportional representation. Rather, the purpose of preclearance of election law
changes is to prevent jurisdictions with a history of discrimination and racial
polarization from manipulating the electoral systems to render the black vote
ineffective.36
Federal Examiners for Voter Registration (Sections 6 and 7)
Whenever the Attorney General of the United States receives written complaints
of denial of the right to vote for racial reasons from 20 or more residents of a
jurisdiction, or whenever the Attorney General thinks it is advisable, Section 637
authorizes the him or her to request the U.S. Office of Personnel Management to send
federal examiners to list eligible voters for registration in any political subdivision
of a state if the political subdivision is covered by Section 4(a) (suspension of tests
and devices).
Section 738 prescribes procedures for the listing of voter registrants by federal
examiners.
Federal Election Observers (Section 8)
Section 839 authorizes the Attorney General to request the Office of Personnel
Management to send election observers to any political subdivision where an
examiner has been assigned. Election observers assure that all registered voters are
allowed to vote, and that all votes are counted.
35 Abigail Thernstrom, “The Odd Evolution of the Voting Rights Act,” The Public Interest,
no. 55, spring 1979: pp. 49-76.
36 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, The Voting Rights Act: Unfulfilled Goals (Washington:
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, 1981), pp. 38-42; U.S. Congress, House, Committee on
the Judiciary, Voting Rights Extension, report to Accompany H.R. 3112, 97th Cong., 1st sess.,
H.Rept. 97-227 (Washington: GPO, 1981), pp. 17-20.
37 42 U.S.C. § 1973d.
38 42 U.S.C. § 1973e.
39 42 U.S.C. § 1973f.

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Release from Coverage (Section 4(a))
To obtain release from federal regulations a state or subdivision must obtain a
declaratory judgment to the effect that for the preceding years no literary tests or
similar devices were used to deny the right to vote for racial reasons. By 1970,
Alaska and counties within Arizona, Idaho and North Carolina were released from
the prohibitions of the act.40
Prohibition of English-Language Literacy Requirement for
Citizens Educated in American Schools (Section 4(e))

Section 4(e)41 forbids any American citizen who has successfully completed the
sixth grade in any accredited, American-flag school in which the language is other
than English from being denied the right to vote because of inability to read, write,
or understand the English language. This provision was intended to protect the half-
million Puerto Ricans of voting age residing in New York City who had been
educated in American schools in Puerto Rico where classroom instruction was
entirely in Spanish (as contrasted with bilingual schools). Many could not meet the
English-literacy requirement for voting in New York.42
General Prohibition of Discriminatory Voting Laws
(Section 2)

Section 243 forbids any state or political subdivision to enact any election law
“to deny or abridge” voting rights on account of race or color. It is a statutory form
of the Fifteenth Amendment, and is a basis for judicial enforcement by court suits.44
Section 2 is applicable not only to jurisdictions covered through Section 4(b), but
applies nationwide. Unlike other sections of the act, it is a requirement from which
jurisdictions cannot be released from coverage after a certain period of time.
Moreover, while Section 5 preclearance is limited to changes made in election laws
since November 1, 1964, election laws may be challenged in court under Section 2
regardless of when they were enacted.
Prior to its amendment in 1982, the standard for determining whether an
election law violated Section 2 differed from the standard applicable in Section 5.
The standard for determining violation of Section 2 from 1965 to 1982 was whether
the law in question was enacted with the purpose or intention of abridging voting
rights. Because of the difficulty of demonstrating such a violation in court, this
40 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.
41 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(e).
42 Congressional Record, vol. 111, part 8: pp. 11060-11061.
43 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.
44 U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on the Constitution,
Voting Rights Act, Report on S. 1992, (at head of title: committee print), 97th Cong., 2nd sess.
(Washington: GPO, 1982), p. 20.

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standard was changed in 1982, to require only that the law in question resulted in the
abridgment of voting rights.45
Civil Actions to Enforce Compliance (Section 12(d))
Under the provisions of Section 12(d)46 the Attorney General of the United
States can institute civil actions in federal district courts to seek enforcement of the
provisions of the act described above — suspension of tests and devices, abolition
of English literacy tests for citizens educated in foreign-language American schools,
preclearance of election-law changes, and prohibition of discriminatory election laws.
Prohibits Intimidation of Any Qualified Person from Voting
(Section 11)

Section 11 prohibits any person whether acting under color of law or otherwise
from
(1) failing or refusing to permit any qualified person from voting in general,
special, or primary federal elections;47
(2) refusing to count the vote of a qualified person; or
(3) intimidating any one attempting to vote or any one who is assisting a person
in voting under certain provisions of this act.48
It also forbids any person from giving false information in order to establish
eligibility to register or vote, or conspiring with someone else for that purpose.
Penalties for such conduct are a maximum fine of $10,000 or imprisonment for five
years, or both.
Section 11(d) provides that a person within the jurisdiction of an examiner who
knowingly falsifies or conceals a material fact or makes false statements or
representations, or uses a document that contains false or fraudulent statements is
subject to a fine of $10,000, imprisonment for five years, or both.
Protection of Paper Ballot or Any Official Voting Record
(Section 12(b))

Anyone who, within a year following an election in a political subdivision
where an examiner has been appointed, destroys or alters the marking of a paper
ballot that has been cast in that election or changes an official voting record in that
45 City of Mobile v. Bolden, 446 U.S. 55 (1980).
46 42 U.S.C. § 1973j.
47 That is, office of the President, the Vice President, presidential elector, Member of the
United States Senate, Member of the House of Representatives, Delegates or Commissioners
from the territories or possessions, and the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico.
48 Specifically, sections 3(a), 6, 8, 9, 10, or 12(e).

CRS-14
election is subject to a maximum fine of $5,000, or imprisonment for five years, or
both.
The Voting Rights Amendments of 1970
(P.L. 91-285)

Following the 1965 Act, the registration of nearly one million new black voters
was recorded. The litigation record following passage of the act, a report of the
Commission on Civil Rights, and testimony at congressional hearings, however,
revealed that various devices were being used to negate the newly gained voting
strength of blacks.49 They included:
(1) Switching to at-large elections when black voting strength is concentrated in
particular districts,
(2) Extending the terms of incumbent white officials,
(3) Making certain offices appointive rather than elective,
(4) Changing the dates of elections suddenly,
(5) Changing the qualifications of candidates,
(6) Increasing the costs of a filing fee for election, and
(7) Gerrymandering to dilute the nonwhite vote.
After much debate, Congress amended the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The
Voting Rights Amendments of 1970, signed into law by President Richard M. Nixon
on June 22, 1970, contained several new provisions that:
(1) Extended the expiration date for five more years to August 1975,
(2) Extended from five to 10 years the period of time for which an area covered
by the act must abstain from the use of any literacy test or similar device to
discriminate against voters because of race or color,
(3) Amended Section 4 of the act to make the “trigger formula” cover three
districts in Alaska; Apache County, Arizona; Imperial County, California;
Elmore County, Idaho; Bronx, Kings (Brooklyn) and New York (Manhattan)
counties, New York; and Wheeler County, Oregon
(4) Suspended the use of literacy tests in all states until August 6, 1975,
(5) Provided that any person could vote in a Presidential election if he had
established residency 30 days prior to a Presidential election, and
(6) Lowered the voting age to 18 years.50
Extension of Duration of the Act (Section 4(a))
Congress extended from five to 10 years the period of time during which states
and political subdivisions covered by the triggering provisions of Section 4(b) and
seeking release from coverage must not have used any literacy test or device as a
49 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Political Participation, Report, 1968 (Washington:
GPO, 1968), p. 256.
50 P.L. 91-285, June 22, 1970; 84 Stat. 314; Congressional Quarterly Almanac, 91st Cong.,
2nd sess., 1970, vol. 26 (Washington: Congressional Quarterly, Inc., 1971), pp. 192-193.

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condition of voter registration with the purpose or effect of denying the right to vote
on account of race.51
Expansion of Coverage of the Act (Section 4(b))
In 1970, the amendments also changed the coverage formula of Section 4(b) to
include any state or political subdivision that used a literacy test for voter registration
on November 1, 1968, and in which less-than-50% registration or voting occurred in
the 1968 presidential election. With the amendments, jurisdictions covered have to
preclear election law changes made since November 1, 1968, and are subject to
assignment of federal examiners and election observers. The formula was extended
from regional (southern states) to national coverage. The extension was also
intended to establish the principle that the effort to protect voting rights is not limited
by a date in the past, that is, 1964, but is ongoing.52 Subdivisions in the following
states were covered through the 1970 amendment of Section 4(b) — Arizona,
California, Connecticut, Idaho, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York and
Wyoming.
Ban on Literacy Tests
A new Section 20153 imposed a ban on literacy tests and devices as conditions
for voter registration in all jurisdictions in the country not already subject to the
suspension of tests and devices under Section 4(a) until August 6, 1975. Thus, it was
made coterminous with the suspension of literacy tests under Section 4(a). The
rationale for this new provision was that the law should not discriminate against one
part of the country, and that literacy requirements may prevent many minority
citizens from voting in jurisdictions not covered by Section 4(a).54
Residence Requirements (Section 202)
A new Section 20255 provides that if a person applies for registration in his or
her state not later than 30 days prior to the election, then he or she if otherwise
qualified to vote, shall not be denied the right to vote in a presidential election
because of a residence requirement. If a citizen moved to another state after the 30th
day preceding a presidential election, that person has the right to vote in his or her
former state.
Any citizen who is a resident of a state must be permitted to vote in a
presidential election by absentee ballot if he or she applies to that state not later than
seven days prior to the election.
51 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.
52 Congressional Record, March 10, 1970, vol. 116, part 5, pp. 6654-6655.
53 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa.
54 Ibid., December 10, 1969, vol. 115, part 28, pp. 38133-381355; March 2, 1970, vol. 116,
part 4, p. 5521.
55 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1.

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The Eighteen-Year-Old Vote (Section 302)
Section 30256 of the act grants the right to vote at age 18 in every primary and
general election. Although the Supreme Court invalidated this provision for state and
local elections, the 26th Amendment in 1971 guaranteed the right of 18-year-olds to
vote in all elections.57
The Voting Rights Amendments of 1975 (P.L. 94-73)
In 1975, the Voting Rights Act came up for extension again. The Justice
Department urged another five-year extension of the special coverage provisions of
the act, until 1980, arguing the need to bring black political participation to levels
comparable with that of whites, and to give an incentive to covered states to foster
black registration and voting and, thereby, to demonstrate that special coverage is no
longer needed.58
The Commission on Civil Rights recommended an additional 10-year extension
of the act, until 1985, for several reasons. Because black registration in the covered
states was still below that of whites, and the proportion of black elected officials in
covered states was low in comparison to the black percentage of the voting-age
population in the covered states, there was a continuing need to foster black political
participation. Another reason offered was that the Justice Department had only
recently begun to enforce, effectively, Section 5 (federal preclearance of changes in
election laws); therefore, enforcement of the preclearance requirement should
continue. The Commission felt that Section 5 should remain in effect also to enable
the Justice Department to monitor the electoral redistricting that would be required
after the 1980 census. Such electoral redistricting would be required extensively
under the “one man, one vote” rule, which mandates that electoral districts within
states and political subdivisions be as nearly equal in population as possible. The
Commission recommended extension of Section 5 so that this redistricting would be
subject to federal preclearance of election law changes in order to prevent dilution
of black voting power through racial gerrymandering.59
At congressional hearings, Puerto Rican and Chicano voters and candidates for
political office related voting experiences that paralleled those of blacks. They
pointed out that many Hispanics cannot fill out registration forms and have difficulty
understanding referenda and proposed constitutional amendments. They complained
of inadequate or nonexistent bilingual election material, threats of economic reprisals
for voting, location of polling places in areas where Chicanos were not welcomed,
and burdensome absentee ballot procedures that resulted in limited numbers of
56 42 U.S.C. § 1973bb-1.
57 Oregon v. Mitchell, 400 U.S. 112 (1970).
58 U.S. Congress, House, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Civil and
Constitutional Rights, hearings on H.R. 939 [and other bills], 94th Cong., 1st sess
(Washington: GPO, 1975), pp. 173-174 (testimony of Assistant Attorney General Pottinger).
59 Ibid., p. 29.

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migrant workers’ voting. In addition, they accused the “Anglo” majority of reducing
Hispanics to a minority of voters in previously Spanish-majority areas through
annexations, gerrymandering of electoral districts, and at-large elections.60
Some local officials denied that discrimination against Puerto Rican and
Chicano voters and candidates occurred. They claimed that usually Mexican
Americans declined invitations to serve as election officials. Others opposed
extension of the Voting Rights Act to their state because they argued that counties
with large populations of Spanish speakers had the largest number of registered
voters and highest number of citizens voting in primary and general elections in the
state. Some state officials cited state laws that permitted voters unable to read
English to receive assistance in preparing ballots.61
After debate, Congress extended the act for seven years, through August 6,
1982. The trigger formula provisions were continued for seven years, as well as the
method by which jurisdictions could remove themselves from coverage; and it made
permanent the temporary nationwide ban on use of literacy tests or similar devices.
It extended coverage to more jurisdictions to protect the voting rights of ethnic
groups whose language is other than English. President Gerald R. Ford signed the
Voting Rights Amendments of 1975 into law on August 6, 1975.62
Extension of Duration of Act (Section 4(a))
The 1975 amendments extended the duration of the temporary provisions of the
act for jurisdictions already covered an additional seven years, thus lengthening the
period of coverage of these jurisdictions from 10 to 17 years. To accomplish this,
Section 4(a)63 was amended to provide that, in order to be released from coverage,
any jurisdiction covered by Section 4(b) (the triggering formula) must not have used
a discriminatory test or device for voter registration during the previous 17 years.
(Coverage was based on determinations from the Presidential elections of 1964 or
1968.) This meant that jurisdictions originally covered in 1965 could not seek
release from provisions of the act until 1982, and those covered in 1970 until 1987.
A seven-year instead of a five-year extension was enacted to ensure that jurisdictions
covered in 1965 would not be released until two years after the 1980 census and to
ensure that electoral redistricting as a result of the census would be subject to federal
preclearance under Section 5.64
60 House Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights, Extension of the Voting Rights
Act
, pp. 27-29, pp. 519-535, 598-604, 800-828, 853-886, 922-932.
61 U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Constitutional
Rights, Extension of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, hearings on S. 407 [and other bills], 94th
Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1975), pp. 361-362, 1040-1041; U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights, The Voting Rights Act: Ten Years After, Report, 1975 (Washington: GPO,
1975), pp. 438.
62 P.L. 94-73, August 6, 1975; 89 Stat. 400.
63 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.
64 Congressional Record, July 23, 1975, vol. 121, part 19, pp. 24241-24246; 42 U.S.C. §
(continued...)

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Nationwide Ban on Literacy Tests (Section 201)
In 1975, Congress amended Section 20165 to make permanent the prohibition
of literacy tests for voter registration in noncovered jurisdictions and to extend it to
jurisdictions already subject to the suspension of tests and devices under Section 4(a).
Thus, even if a covered jurisdiction under Section 4(a) were released from coverage
it could not reinstitute tests or devices.
Extension of Coverage to Protect Language Minorities
(Section 4(b))

Major provisions of the amended Voting Rights Act of 1975 pertained to certain
language minorities, defined in Section 14(c)(3)66 as persons of Spanish heritage,
American Indians, Asian Americans and Alaskan Natives. Preclearance and federal
observer protections were applied in any jurisdiction where:
(1) The Census Bureau determined that more than 5% of the voting age citizens
were of a single language minority;
(2) Election materials had been printed only in English for the November 1,
1972, elections; and
(3) Less than 50% of the voting age citizens had registered for or voted in the
1972 presidential election.67
The presumption behind the new coverage formula was that in jurisdictions
using literacy tests as conditions for voter registration, low rates of registration and
voting result, in part at least, from discriminatory application of such tests. With
respect to language minorities, English-only elections were presumed ipso facto to
be discriminatory. The extension of Section 4(b) to protect language minorities
covers the states of Alaska, Arizona and Texas and political subdivisions in
California, Colorado, Florida, Hawaii, Michigan, New York, North Carolina and
South Carolina.68
Jurisdictions Covered With Respect to Language Minorities
Subject to Special Provisions of the Act (Sections 4(a), 5, 6,
and 8)

Jurisdictions covered in 1975 with respect to language minorities are subject to
the same provisions as are jurisdictions covered in 1965 and 1970. Under Section
64 (...continued)
1973b.
65 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa.
66 42 U.S.C. § 1973l.
67 42 U.S.C. § 1973bF9(b), 1973aa-1a.
68 Congressional Quarterly Almanac, 94th Cong., 1st sess., 1975, vol. 31, (Washington:
Congressional Quarterly, Inc., 1976), pp. 521-523.

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4(a),69 jurisdictions covered in 1975 may not use any test or device as a condition for
voter registration. These jurisdictions are required to provide election materials in
the language of the applicable language minority as well as in English.70 Such
jurisdictions must preclear election-law changes enacted since November 1, 1972,
pursuant to Section 5,71 and are subject to assignment of examiners under Section 672
and of election observers under Section 8.73
Duration of Coverage (Section 4(a))
Under Section 4(a)74 as amended in 1975, jurisdictions covered in that year with
respect to language minorities were subject to the provisions of the act for 10 years
instead of 17 years, that is, until 1985. They could be released from coverage by
obtaining a declaratory judgment from the Federal District Court in the District of
Columbia that the jurisdiction’s English-only elections had not been a voting barrier
during the last 10 years.
Bilingual-Election Requirement (Section 203)
Congress, with the addition of Section 20375 in 1975, sought to increase the
voter turnout of language minorities by requiring bilingual elections through August
6, 1985, if:
(1) The Census Bureau determined that 5% of the jurisdiction’s voting age
citizens were of a single language minority, and
(2) The illiteracy rate in English of the language minority was greater than the
national English illiteracy rate. Illiteracy was defined as failure to complete 5th
grade.
This section does not apply to any political subdivision in which each language
minority is less than 5% even though any language minority resident in the political
subdivision comprises more than 5% of the statewide population of voting age
citizens. Jurisdictions covered by Section 203 are required to provide election
materials and oral assistance in the language of the applicable language minority as
well as in English. But jurisdictions that are covered only under Section 203 and not
through the coverage formula of Section 4(b) are not subject to the other special
69 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.
70 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1a(c).
71 42 U.S.C. § 1973c.
72 42 U.S.C. § 1973d.
73 42 U.S.C. § 1973f.
74 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a)(1).
75 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1a.

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provisions of the act — preclearance of election laws, federal examiners or federal
election observers.76
A jurisdiction can be removed from this bilingual election requirement when it
can demonstrate in federal district court that the illiteracy rate of the language
minority was equal to or had dropped below the national illiteracy rate.
These bilingual requirements were scheduled to remain in effect for 10 years,
until 1985, the same duration as that of Section 4(b) coverage for language
minorities. Subdivisions in 30 states were covered by the bilingual election
requirements of Section 203 (with considerable overlap of coverage under Sections
4(b) and 203).77
Addition of Language-Minority Status to Section 2
As originally enacted, Section 2 forbade any jurisdiction in the country to enact
an election law that denies or abridges voting rights on account of race or color. The
1975 amendments added language minorities to this section as a protected class.78
Compilation of Registration and Voting Statistics (Section
207)

A new Section 20779 requires the Census Bureau to compile registration and
voting statistics in every jurisdiction covered by Section 4(a) for every statewide
general election for United States Representatives after January 1, 1974, and in any
jurisdiction for any election designated by the Civil Rights Commission. Census
Bureau surveys are to include only a count of citizens of voting age, and of these by
race or color and national origin, and determination of the extent to which such
persons registered and voted. Section 207 provides that in making such surveys no
participant shall be required to disclose his or her race, color, national origin, political
party affiliation, or how he or she voted.
The Voting Rights Amendments of 1982
(P.L. 97-205)
On August 6, 1982, jurisdictions originally covered by the Voting Rights Act
of 1965 could have sought release from its provisions by showing in the U.S. District
Court for the District of Columbia that they had not used a discriminatory literacy test
76 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1a.
77 These states are Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii,
Idaho, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South
Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming.
78 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(e)(2)(f).
79 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-5.

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or device as a condition for voter registration during the previous 17 years. The
House Judiciary Committee noted that blacks and other minorities may not yet be “in
a position to compete in the political arena against non-minorities on an equal
basis,”80 and that, despite increased registration and voting and election of blacks to
public office, they still may be vulnerable “to attempts by opponents of equality to
diminish their political influence.”81 In order to protect “the ability of minorities to
participate effectively within the political process,” Congress sought to prevent
immediate release of these jurisdictions.82 At the same time, it was perceived that
covered jurisdictions would be given little incentive to foster minority political
participation if they could not obtain release from coverage until the expiration of a
certain number of years, regardless of their efforts to encourage such participation.
The Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1982 were intended to provide such incentive
by offering the possibility of release in the near future to states and political
subdivisions that tried to promote minority political participation.
Congress in 1982 amended Section 4(a)83 of the Voting Rights Act to enable
jurisdictions to seek release from coverage in 1984 instead of their having to wait an
additional five or more years as with previous amendments to the act, provided they
had not used a discriminatory test or device during a certain time period. Congress
also amended Section 284 to provide that courts could judge an election law to be
discriminatory without proof that it was intended to be so, if it results in abridging
minority voting power. Further, Congress extended coverage of the bilingual
provisions of the act (Section 203) to August 6, 1992.
The Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1982 contain four major provisions.
These
(1) extend the preclearance section of the act for 25 years,
(2) require nine states and portions of 13 others to obtain preclearance from the
Justice Department before making any changes in election laws or procedures,
(3) overturn a 1980 Supreme Court ruling in the case of Mobile v. Bolden (that
an intent to discriminate must be shown to prove a violation) and allow certain
voting rights violations under Section 2 to be proved by showing that an election
law or procedure had resulted in discrimination, and
(4) extend provisions requiring certain areas of the country to provide bilingual
election materials until 1992 (the old expiration date was 1985).
80 U.S. Congress, House, Committee on the Judiciary, Voting Rights Act Extension, report
to accompany H.R. 3112, 97th Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. No. 97-227 (Washington: GPO,
1981), p. 11.
81 Ibid.
82 Ibid.
83 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1a.
84 42 U.S.C. § 1973b, 1973aa-1a.

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President Ronald Reagan signed the Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1982
into law on June 29, 1982.85
Extension of Duration of the Act (Section 4(a))
The 1982 amendments extended the current provisions of the act for two years,
which meant that the period of time during which states and political subdivisions
seeking release under Section 4(a)86 could not have used a discriminatory test or
device as a condition for voter registration was increased from 17 to 19 years. (The
10-year period for jurisdictions covered in 1975 with respect to language minorities
was not changed.) Congress decided to hold jurisdictions that were covered in 1965
under the act for two more years, from 1982 until 1984, for two reasons. The first
reason was to give the Justice Department time to prepare for the large number of
court actions for release that were expected as soon as the conditions for release were
changed.87
The second reason was to ensure that redistricting in covered jurisdictions
necessitated by the 1980 census (which had not been completed by 1982) would still
be covered by the Section 5 preclearance requirement. It will be recalled that the
Congress, in 1975, extended that act for seven years, until two years after the 1980
census, so that covered jurisdictions would have to submit their new electoral
districts for federal preclearance. This preclearance enabled the Justice Department
and the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to guarantee that such
redistricting would not abridge or dilute black or Hispanic voting power.
Congressional redistricting had to be completed before the 1982 elections. But there
were other elections — state and local — for which redistricting might not have to
have been completed until after 1982, and Congress extended the current provisions
of the act from 1982 until 1984 so that such redistricting would also be reviewed at
the federal level.88
Amended Conditions for Release from Coverage (Section
4(a))

The 1982 amendments89 provide that on August 5, 1984, any jurisdiction
covered in 1965, 1970 or 1975 may be released from coverage if it can show in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia that it has met the following
conditions during the preceding 10 years:
(1) It has not used a discriminatory test or device for voter registration;
(2) No court has found it to have denied or abridged voting rights;
85 P.L. 97-205; 96 Stat. 131; Congressional Quarterly Almanac, 97th Cong., 2nd sess., 1982,
vol. 38, (Washington: Congressional Quarterly, Inc., 1983), pp. 373-374.
86 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa1a.
87 House Committee on the Judiciary, Voting Rights Act Extension, H.Rept. 97-227, p. 39.
88 Congressional Record, July 23, 1975, vol. 121, part 19, pp. 24241-24246.
89 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1a.

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(3) It had complied with the preclearance requirement of Section 5 by submitting
all election-law changes for federal review;
(4) There has been no federal objection to any election law change submitted
under Section 5;
(5) No federal examiners have been assigned to the jurisdiction;
(6) It has fostered political participation by minority citizens; and
(7) It can present evidence of minority registration, voting and other political
participation.
The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia is to retain jurisdiction of
any action for release from coverage for 10 years, and is to reopen the case if the
Attorney General or an aggrieved person alleges that voting discrimination has
occurred. No jurisdiction may be released from coverage while it is defending itself
in a voting rights case, provided that the case was initiated prior to the jurisdiction’s
filing a court action for release from coverage. This proviso was added to prevent
persons or groups from precluding a jurisdiction from seeking release simply by
filing a voting rights suit in court.
Separate Release for Political Subdivisions (Section 4(a))
Prior to the 1982 amendments, only a state covered statewide or a political
subdivision of a noncovered state could seek release from coverage. Congress
amended Section 4(a)90 in 1982 to allow a political subdivision of a covered state to
obtain release from coverage separately.
Reconsideration and Termination of the Act (Section 4(a))
The 1982 amendments provide that Congress shall “reconsider” the special,
administrative provisions of the act (preclearance of election-law changes and
assignment of examiners and election observers) 15 years after the effective date of
the 1982 amendments, in 1997; and that these provisions shall expire 25 years after
their effective date, in 2007.
Extension of Bilingual-Election Requirement (Section 203)
The 1982 amendments extended the bilingual election provisions of Section
20391 for seven years, until August 6, 1992. The amendments further provided that
the count of members of any language minority in a jurisdiction is to be limited to
those who cannot read English well enough to use English-language registration and
voting materials, as determined by the Census Bureau in the 1980 census and in
studies conducted thereafter. This limitation on the counting of language-minority
members applies only to Section 203. In counting members of a language minority
to determine whether a jurisdiction is covered under Section 4(b), all members are
counted even if they can read English well enough to register and vote in English.
90 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.
91 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1a.

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Following enactment of the 1982 amendment to Section 203, the Census Bureau
determined that one or more political subdivisions in the following 20 states were
subject to the bilingual election requirement: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado,
Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Massachusetts, Michigan, Montana, New
Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas,
Utah, and Wisconsin.92
Amendment to Judicial Standard of Proof Under Section 2
In the 1980 case of City of Mobile v. Bolden,93 the Supreme Court affirmed that
the proper standard for courts to use in deciding cases under Section 2 was
demonstration of discriminatory intention. The Court said that courts can find any
law to be in violation of the Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendment only if it is shown
that the law was enacted with the purpose or intention of discriminating. Because
it regarded Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act as a statutory restatement of the
Fifteenth Amendment, the Court held that the same judicial standard — intent —
applies to cases brought under Section 2.94
To make it easier to challenge discriminatory election laws, Congress amended
Section 295 to establish discriminatory effect or result as a standard of proof in voting
rights cases. For example, if elections for the city council in a majority-white city
were conducted at-large, with the result that black voters were unable to elect even
one councilman of their own choice, blacks, prior to 1982, could have prevailed in
a court suit seeking an injunction against the at-large election law only if they could
have proven that it was instituted for the deliberate purpose of preventing black
candidates from being elected. Discriminatory motivation is often difficult to prove.
After the 1982 amendment to Section 2, they might obtain such an injunction by
showing that blacks are unable to elect any of their own candidates because of the
discriminatory result of the at-large system.
Congress recognized a danger in adopting a “results” standard for Section 2,
namely, that electoral outcomes in which black voters fail to elect their own
candidates in numbers proportional to the percentage that blacks comprise of the total
electorate might be adduced as evidence sufficient to eliminate any at-large electoral
systems through court suits. In this way, the results standard could have led to
acceptance of a right of racial- or ethnic-group proportional representation. To avoid
this conclusion, Congress provided that racially or ethnically unequal results of an
electoral system may indicate a violation of Section 2 only if such results occur
within a wider context of discrimination against a racial or ethnic minority. Where
such official or societal discrimination is absent, unequal results of an electoral
system would not suffice to convict the electoral system that produced such results.
92 49 Federal Register 25887, June 25, 1984. This list replaced the list of covered
jurisdictions published after the 1975 amendments to the act (see page 19).
93 446 U.S. 55.
94 Ibid., at 60-1.
95 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.

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The statute states that a protected class has no right to have its members elected to
office in numbers proportional to their percentage in the population.96
The 1982 amendments of Section 2 forbid application of any law “in a manner
which results in a denial or abridgment” of the voting rights of members of protected
classes — blacks and members of language minorities. Section 2 now provides that
a court may find such a violation of voting rights if, within a community
characterized by widespread discrimination, it determines that either of the following
conditions obtains:
(1) party nominating procedures deny equal opportunity for members of
protected classes to have persons of their own choice selected as candidates for
election to public office; or
(2) the method of election denies equal opportunity for members of protected
classes to elect candidates of their own choice to public office.
To prove a violation of Section 2, it must be shown that either of the above
conditions occurs as part of a “totality of circumstances” constituting societal
discrimination and racial or ethnic polarization, as evidenced, for example, by: a
history of official discrimination; residual effects of discrimination in education,
employment and health; expressed racism in election campaigns; unresponsiveness
of elected officials to needs of the minority community; and racial bloc voting if it
is indicative of racial antagonism.97
The new standard of proof under Section 2 is not, then, a pure “results” standard
that might open the way to challenges of electoral systems throughout the country in
which minorities cannot achieve proportional representation. Rather, it is a standard
by which electoral results may be adduced as evidence of discrimination if an
apparently fair electoral system — namely, one that meets the “one man, one vote”
principle — can be shown to perpetuate the domination of a white “power structure”
to the disadvantage of a minority group.
The Voting Rights Amendments of 1992
(P.L. 102-344)
In 1992, Congress passed the Voting Rights Language Assistance Act, which
amended Section 203 of the Voting Rights Act. The Voting Rights Language
Assistance Act requires election officials in states and political subdivisions with
significant numbers of non-English speaking citizens of voting age to provide
bilingual services to them. The expiration date of Section 203 was extended for 15
more years to 2007.
96 For further discussion of racial proportional representation, see CRS Report RS21593,
Redistricting and the Voting Rights Act: A Legal Analysis of Georgia v. Ashcroft, by L.
Paige Whitaker.
97 U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Voting Rights Act Extension, report
on S. 1992, 97th Cong., 2nd sess., S.Rept. 97-417, pp. 28-30.

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Debate on Bilingual Voting Assistance
Proponents of Assistance. Proponents of bilingual language assistance
argued that considerable numbers of recently naturalized immigrants were not
sufficiently fluent in English to understand complicated election procedures and
electoral issues. Some long-time citizens of the United States, such as older
Hispanics who learned very little English in school because they grew up in
communities where Spanish was the principal language, needed language assistance
too. As a result of their limited English, many of these citizens did not register and
vote, even though, through the use of non-English news publications and radios, they
were informed on the issues. Those who recommended bilingual language assistance
argued that historically this country acknowledged and tolerated linguistic pluralism
and diversity in education and should do likewise in the political arena. Advocates
of providing bilingual election materials rejected the charge that language assistance
discourages people from learning English. They maintained that people learn English
for many reasons, most importantly to secure good employment and to communicate
with others in the community. The provision of language assistance, they argued, did
not diminish the motivations for learning English. On the contrary, it strengthened
the ties that bound the people of the United States, for it was inclusive in nature
rather than exclusive, and thereby ensured that no citizen was denied the fundamental
right to vote because of a lack of fluency in English.98
Opponents of Assistance. The extension of Section 203 was opposed for
several reasons. Opponents of the extension questioned whether it was needed. They
contended that evidence submitted when the 1975 amendments were added was
feeble then and had become even less persuasive. Some denied that there had been
sufficient proof offered that bilingual ballots were effective in increasing voter
registration, voter participation, or in changing the voter registration and/or
participation between white and minority voters. Opponents who considered the
bilingual election requirement a distortion of the intent of the Voting Rights Act
argued that Congress passed the act in response to discrimination against racial
minorities at the polling place. According to them, a person’s ability to understand
English was not immutable in the way a person’s race is; thus, applying the Voting
Rights Act in this way discouraged persons from learning English and, thereby,
perpetuated divisions in society. Some opponents were also concerned about
problems involved in accurately translating complex legal language from English to
another language. The Canadian problem with bilingualism often was cited as an
example of what would occur in the United States if we supported bilingual election
material. Some opposition to bilingual election materials was based on the fear that
it would corrupt the democratic process or would be expensive. The argument was
also made that bilingual ballots delayed the progress of certain ethnic groups, because
English is the language of this country and persons who do not speak it cannot
advance.99
98 U.S. Congress, House, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Civil and
Constitutional Rights, hearings on Voting Rights Act: Bilingual Education, Expert Witness
Fees, and Presley
, 102nd Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1992), pp. 25-29.
99 U.S. Congress, House, Committee on the Judiciary, Voting Rights Language Assistance
(continued...)

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Reauthorization and Modification of Section 203
In addressing the extension and modification of Section 203 of the Voting
Rights Act, some leaders of Hispanic, Asian and Native American populations
offered evidence showing how the provision of bilingual voting assistance had
impacted their communities and how coverage of the act could be widened to ensure
that large numbers of limited-English speakers participated in the electoral process.
Hispanics. From 1980 to 1990, the Hispanic electorate increased greatly. The
Hispanic electorate grew by over 50%, while the national electorate increased by less
than 10%. Yet, Hispanics remained far behind the general voting population in
registering, voting, and electing Hispanic officials. Several factors have been cited
to explained this. One was that 37% of all Hispanics were non-citizens and thus
were ineligible to vote. A third of Hispanics were too young to vote. Low education
and income levels played a role in reducing Hispanic participation in the political
process. Some argued that the bilingual provisions of the Voting Rights Act needed
to be broadened and extended. They cited several million potential Hispanic voters
who were still unregistered in 1988 as an indication of the continued significant need
for language assistance.100
Many voting populations that had limited English language proficiency lived in
major metropolitan areas where the surrounding population was so large that the
limited-English population could not meet the 5% standard. For instance, the 69,000
Spanish monolinguals residing in Los Angeles in 1984 did not total 5% of the
population and, consequently, were denied bilingual voting assistance. In contrast,
a city of 100,000 residents with only 5,000 non-English speakers could qualify for
language assistance under the Voting Rights Act as amended. Examples of counties
that did not meet the 5% standard yet had sizeable limited-English-speaking
populations included Los Angeles County, California; Cook County, Illinois; Queens
County, New York; Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania; and Essex County, New
Jersey.101
Some jurisdictions recognized the lack of federal voting protections for limited-
English speakers and, accordingly, passed state and municipal laws to provide
multilingual ballots. Others chose to supplement the provisions of the Voting Rights
Act by passing laws requiring affidavits to be in Spanish for Spanish speakers, by
providing interpreters for persons who do not speak, read, or write English, or by
providing for elections conducted in both Spanish and English. Still other states
chose not to take any action in this respect. Thus, nationally, there was no uniform
99 (...continued)
Act of 1992, report to accompany H.R. 4312, 102nd Cong., 2nd sess., H.Rept. 102-655
(Washington: GPO, 1992), pp. 777-779, 787-791; Subcommittee on Civil and
Constitutional Rights, hearings on Voting Rights Act, pp. 246-255.
100 Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights, hearings on Voting Rights Act, pp. 312-
316; National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Educational Fund, The
Latino Vote in 1992
(Washington: NALEO Educational Fund, 1992), p. iv.
101 Sandra Guerra, “Voting Rights and the Constitution: The Disenfranchisement of Non-
English Speaking Citizens,” Yale Law Review, vol. 97, pp. 1423-1424.

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bilingual voting coverage for limited-English speakers. In amending the Voting
Rights Act to assist language minorities, coverage in every jurisdiction was made the
same.102

Prior to 1982, in states and political subdivisions where the Director of the
Census found that more than 5% of eligible voters were members of a language
minority and that the illiteracy rate of these voters exceeded the national average,
Section 203 of the Voting Rights Act prohibited English-only elections. But in 1982,
after Congress amended Section 203, only those members of a minority “who do not
speak or understand English adequately enough to participate in the electoral
process” were covered. Congress intended for the formula that identified covered
jurisdictions to more accurately target bilingual assistance for those who needed it.
Some leaders of limited English populations questioned if that was indeed what had
occurred.
To determine the English speaking comprehension element of the coverage
formula, the Bureau of the Census used wording that offered respondents four
choices — very well, well, not well, or not at all. Those who answered other than
“very well” were presumed to need bilingual voting assistance. Some advocates of
bilingual assistance for limited English populations claimed this wording gave a poor
indication of language ability. In using this method, many counties previously
required to provide Spanish language assistance no longer had to as a result of the
amendments of 1982. Some felt that this method of identifying limited English
minorities in need of language assistance was inadequate because it tended to
overestimate English proficiency.103
Asian Americans. Difficulties in voting were also experienced by large
Asian-American communities in California (Los Angeles, San Francisco and Santa
Clara counties) and three New York City counties (Kings, Queens, and New York).
Although the Asian American population had increased remarkably in the previous
decade, it was still not expected to meet the 5% trigger for bilingual assistance
coverage because the total State/county eligible Asian American voting population
was numerically small in large metropolitan areas. Two of the five counties
previously covered by Section 203 were no longer required to provide language
assistance in California. Also, because each individual Asian language group had to
qualify for Section 203 coverage on its own, frequently, a political subdivision was
not covered under Section 203. For instance, although the Asian or Pacific Islander
population in San Francisco county totaled over 200,000, the county was not required
to provide bilingual voting assistance because no one language assistance group met
individually all requirements of Section 203. San Francisco, the only mainland
county to provide Asian language assistance — in this case in Chinese — was
dropped from federal coverage even though Chinese Americans comprised the largest
102 Ibid., pp. 1423-1424.
103 U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on the Constitution,
The Voting Rights Act Language Assistance Amendments, 1992, hearings, 102nd Cong., 2nd
sess., on S. 2236, February 26, 1992 (testimony of Marshall Plummer, Vice-President of the
Navajo Nation).

CRS-29
language minority group (over 127,000)104 in the county. (Because San Francisco
was obligated under the provisions of a Consent Decree to develop a comprehensive
voter registration outreach plan, the city had continued to provide language
assistance.)105
The language barrier reportedly prevented many Asian Americans from voting
and electing Asian Americans to office.106 According to a report of the Civil Rights
Commission, nearly 70% of the Asian-American population aged 15 and over were
foreign-born and a large number of Asian Americans had limited English proficiency
in the 1980 census. Using data based on the 1990 census, Charles Pei Wang,
Chairman of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, stated that close to 70% of the
Asian-American population is foreign-born and has limited-English proficiency. In
New York City, 31% of District 20’s approximately 140,000 residents were Asian
American, but Asian Americans were only 6.7% of registered voters. Some
attributed Asian-Americans’ limited success in electing more of their own to political
office to low Asian-American voter registration. Four out of five limited-English-
proficient Asian Americans stated that they would have voted more often if bilingual
assistance had been provided.107 Results of a survey of Asian and Pacific Islander
Americans in Los Angeles indicated support for the bilingual provisions. Eighty-four
percent of all respondents believed that bilingual ballots would be helpful. Of
American-born respondents, 77.7% thought bilingual ballots would be helpful, while
89% of those naturalized thought bilingual ballots would be helpful.108
Since many non-English-speaking citizens relied on the oral assistance
mandated by Section 203, advocates argued that reauthorization of Section 203
would prevent voting obstacles to these citizens and increase their participation in the
political process. To more accurately determine eligible limited-English-speaking
populations, they suggested that the coverage formula include a numerical threshold
in addition to the 5% calculation feature.
Native Americans. Native Americans comprised less than 1% of the total
population of the United States. Since they did not exceed 5% of most counties, the
5% threshold would not have protected their voting rights. Native American leaders
argued that Section 203’s definition of a “political subdivision” as a county or parish
ineffectively identified limited-English Native Americans who lived on reservations
104 Asian Week, May 17, 1991, p. 1.
105 Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights, Voting Rights Act, p. 207, pp. 284-285.
106 Su Sun Bai, “Affirmative Pursuit of Political Equality for Asian Pacific Americans:
Reclaiming the Voting Rights Act,” University of Pennsylvania Law Review, vol. 139, pp.
731-767.
107 U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on the Constitution,
The Voting Rights Act Language Assistance Amendments, 1992, hearings, 102nd Cong., 2nd
sess., on S. 2236, p. 162; U.S. Civil Rights Commission, Civil Rights Issues Facing Asian
Americans in the 1990s
, pp. 158-162.
108 Asian-Pacific American Legal Center of Southern California’s Language Rights Project,
Voting Rights Survey: Asian and Pacific Islander Americans in Los Angeles, January-
February 1992.

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because many reservations included two or more counties and sometimes crossed
state boundaries. They believed their unique history and demography created an
atypical situation for Section 203’s definition of a political subdivision, and that
because of this the reservation, not the county or parish, should have been the
standard of comparison.
As a result of the amendments of 1982, many counties with significant numbers
of limited-English Native American residents were no longer required to provide
language assistance for them. For example, in New Mexico, two counties were no
longer required to provide language assistance to Native Americans. Six out of eight
counties in South Dakota; four out of five in North Dakota; 24 out of 25 counties in
Oklahoma, and six out of seven counties in Montana no longer were required by
federal law to provide language assistance to Native Americans.109
There was evidence that on at least one reservation the availability of language
assistance had been split along county lines. As a result, Indians residing on a
reservation in one county received language assistance while others living on the
same reservation but in another county did not.110
Another anomalous result of the 1982 amendments occurred when counties
contained two tribes, each speaking a different language. Under provisions of
Section 203, the tribe that met the 5% single language minority threshold received
language assistance while the other did not. Therefore, some Native American
representatives supported amending Section 203 to prohibit English-only elections
where limited-English Indian speakers of voting age:
(1) lived on or near a reservation or other identifiable Indian community (such
as the Pueblo communities in New Mexico), and
(2) exceeded 5% of the American Indian voting age population of that
reservation or community.
Cost of Bilingual Election Assistance
A major objection to extension of Section 203 was related to the costs for states
of providing bilingual voting assistance to limited-English speakers. Information
provided on the costs of bilingual election materials in San Francisco and New York
showed the costs as minimal. The San Francisco Registrar of Voters office in San
Francisco reported total costs for the November 1991 election was $1.1 million; total
costs for providing bilingual materials was $42,000 or less than 4%. The New York
City Board of Elections reported the costs of preparing 15,000 Chinese and Korean-
language election assistance brochures for the 1991 City Council election was about
$3,300. Chinese language interpreters were hired also at minimal costs.111
109 Subcommittee on the Constitution, hearings on Voting Rights Act Language Assistance
Amendments of 1992
, p. 183.
110 Ibid.
111 House Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights, Voting Rights Act, pp. 296,
323.

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Written. In 1986, the General Accounting Office (GAO) prepared a report on
the costs and use of bilingual voting assistance during the November 6, 1984, general
election that was based on data obtained through exit polls it sponsored in Texas, and
responses from covered state governments. Of 295 jurisdictions that responded to
the GAO questionnaire, an estimated 83 incurred $388,000 in additional costs to
provide written assistance. This figure represents an average of about 7.6% of their
total costs for the general election. GAO estimated that 18 additional states provided
written assistance but incurred no costs to do so.
Additional costs associated with the provision of minority language text in
election publications resulted from translating text into the minority language, higher
printing costs for using more paper and ink, and because of the extra time needed for
typesetting and proofreading.112
Oral. Of 259 responding jurisdictions that reported providing oral assistance,
GAO estimated no additional costs were incurred by 205. An estimated 15 of these
jurisdictions did not know the amount of additional costs they incurred in providing
bilingual assistance. The 39 jurisdictions that provided oral assistance spent about
$30,000 for it. This figure represents an average of about 2.8% of their costs to hold
the November 1984 general election.
A majority of jurisdictions did not incur costs for providing oral assistance for
several reasons. Some did not hire additional workers; rather, they found poll
workers who were able to converse in the covered minority language. Usually,
jurisdictions paid bilingual and monolingual poll workers at the same rate. In other
cases, rather than hiring a bilingual worker for polling places, they made someone
available if the polling place indicated a need for language assistance. Even then,
standby workers were often unpaid volunteers or were paid only if they actually
provided oral assistance at the polling place.113
Use of Language Assistance
According to GAO, 80% of 277 jurisdictions in Texas that had provided written
assistance on official ballots could not estimate the number of people who used the
assistance. Jurisdictions lacked this information because they overwhelmingly used
a bilingual format for election materials with both English and the minority language
in one document, and also used voting machines to accommodate the bilingual needs
of voters.
Of the 49 officials who could estimate the use of minority language assistance
available on official ballots in their jurisdictions, 26 said that no one used the
assistance. Twenty-three officials using professional judgment, requests for ballots,
minority language statistics, and other methods, singularly or in combination,
112 United States General Accounting Office, Bilingual Voting Assistance, Costs of and Use
During the November 1984 General Election
, report to the Congress by the Comptroller
General of the United States, GGD-86-134BR, September 1986 (Washington: 1986), pp.
16-17.
113 Ibid., pp. 19-20.

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estimated that from 1 to 7,500 people used the assistance on official ballots. Based
on exit poll interviews with voters, GAO estimated that 69,000 of approximately
275,000 Hispanics who voted in the 1,012 Texas precincts used written assistance
on election day.114
Seventy-four percent of responding jurisdictions that provided oral assistance
were unable to estimate the number of voters who received the assistance. Of the 62
jurisdictions that offered estimates of oral assistance, 29 reported that no one used the
assistance and 33 provided estimates ranging from one to 2,634 people. About
85,000 out of 263,000 Hispanic voters received oral assistance in Spanish.115
Key Provisions of the Voting Rights Language Assistance
Act of 1992

The Voting Rights Language Assistance Act of 1992 maintains language
assistance for selected language minority populations and offers coverage for
jurisdictions with significant populations that previously had not offered language
assistance under federal mandate.116
Bilingual Voting Materials Requirement (Section 203, (b))
Provisions of Section 203117 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 were extended for
15 more years to 2007, making it coextensive with the rest of the act.
Covered States and Political Subdivisions
The triggering mechanism of Section 203118 was strengthened by adding a
numerical threshold provision and by more effectively identifying Native Americans
who need language assistance. A state or political subdivision is a covered state or
political subdivision if the Director of the Census determines, based on census data,
that more than 5% of the citizens of voting age there are members of a single
language minority and are limited-English proficient; more than 10,000 of the
citizens of voting age are members of a single language minority and limited-English
proficient; or if a political subdivision contains all or any part of an Indian
reservation with more than 5% of the American Indian or Alaska Native citizens of
voting age within the reservation who are members of a single language minority and
who are limited-English proficient.
114 Ibid., p. 26.
115 Ibid., pp. 32-34.
116 P.L. 102-344, 106 Stat. 921; U.S. Congress, H.Rept. 102-655, p. 3.
117 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1a.
118 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1a.

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Current Major Provisions of the Act
Following is a summary of the major provisions of the Voting Rights Act
including amendments of the VRA 2006 (P.L. 109-246) which will become effective
in August 2007.119
Coverage (Section 4(b))120
A state or political subdivision of a state is subject to the administrative
enforcement provisions of the act if it maintained a literacy test or device (such as the
requirement that a qualified voter vouch for the eligibility of a registration applicant)
as a condition for voter registration on November 1 of 1964, 1968 or 1972. A state
or political subdivision of a state also is subject to the enforcement provisions of the
act if either less than 50% of age-eligible citizens were registered to vote or less than
50% of such citizens voted in the presidential election held in the year in which it
used such a test or device. A jurisdiction is considered to have used a literacy test on
November 1, 1972, if more than 5% of its voting-age population were of a single
language minority (American Indian, Alaskan Native, Asian American or of Spanish
heritage) and it conducted elections with exclusively English-language materials or
assistance.121
Suspension of Tests and Devices (Section 4(a))122
Jurisdictions covered under the act through one of the coverage formulas of
Section 4(b) may not use any test or device as a condition of voter registration. With
respect to jurisdictions covered through 1972 criteria, suspension of tests and devices
means providing electoral materials and assistance in the language of the applicable
language minority as well as in English.
Preclearance of Election-Law Changes (Section 5)123
Covered jurisdictions are required to submit for federal review any change in
law affecting elections before putting such a law into effect. Jurisdictions that have
been covered because they used literacy tests for voter registration and had low
political participation in the 1964, 1968 or 1972 presidential election must submit
119 For further discussion of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended, see the following
reports: CRS Report RS21593, Redistricting and the Voting Rights Act: A Legal Analysis
of Georgia v. Ashcroft
, by L. Paige Whitaker, and CRS Report RS21585, Congressional
Redistricting: Is At-Large Representation Permitted in the House of Representatives?
, by
David C. Huckabee and L. Paige Whitaker.
120 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.
121 Jurisdictions covered under Section 4(b) are listed in 28 C.F.R. Pt. 51.54, Appendix.
Those covered for language minorities are also listed in 28 C.F.R. Pt. 55.24, Appendix. This
Appendix indicates the minority language applicable for each jurisdiction.
122 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a)(1).
123 42 U.S.C. § 1973c.

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election-law changes made since November 1 of 1964, 1968, 1972, respectively.
They must submit such changes in law either to the U.S. Justice Department or the
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to ensure that any new law affecting
elections neither has the purpose nor will have the effect of denying or abridging
voting rights on account of race, color or language-minority status. The jurisdiction
may put a new law into effect only after it has been submitted to the Attorney
General and the latter has not objected to it within 60 days.
Federal Election Observers (Section 8)124
Whenever a court or the Attorney authorizes appointment of observers for a
political subdivision, the Director of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM)
must assign as many election observers as the Director deems appropriate for each
subdivision. In response to written meritorious complaints from residents, elected
officials, or civic participation organizations that covered voters are either
experiencing discrimination or are likely to experience discrimination, the Attorney
General can certify that the right to vote in a political jurisdiction is being denied or
abridged. In determining whether observers should be assigned to a political
subdivision, the Attorney General can consider, among other factors, whether the
ratio of nonwhite persons to white persons registered to vote is reasonable or whether
there is substantial evidence that bona fide efforts are being made to comply with the
14th or 15th amendment.
Conditions for Release From Coverage (Section 4(a))125
A covered state or political subdivision of a state may be released from required
preclearance of election law changes under Section 5 and from being subject to
assignment both of examiners or of observers if it can meet several specified
conditions. The state or political subdivision of a state must be able to demonstrate
in an action for a declaratory judgment in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia that during the previous 10 years it has:
(1) not used a discriminatory test or device for voter registration;
(2) not been found in a court case to have denied or abridged voting rights, and
it has not agreed through a consent decree to discontinue any discriminatory
practice with respect to voting;
(3) precleared all election-law changes with the Justice Department or with the
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia;
(4) not received a single objection to an election-law change submitted for
federal preclearance;
(5) not been assigned a federal examiner;
(6) promoted political participation by racial or language minorities; and
(7) collected presentable evidence of minority registration, voting and other
political participation.
124 42 U.S.C. § 1973f.
125 42 U.S.C. 1973b.

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The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia is to retain jurisdiction over
any action for release from coverage for 10 years, and is to reopen the case whenever
during that time period either the Attorney General or an aggrieved person alleges
that voting discrimination has occurred in the jurisdiction.
A jurisdiction cannot be released from coverage while it is defending itself in
a voting rights case, unless the case was filed in court after the jurisdiction initiated
a court action for release from coverage.
Termination of Coverage Provisions (Section 4(a))126
Congress shall reconsider provisions that require preclearance of election-law
changes and assignments of examiners and election observers in 25 years. These
provisions will expire in 2032.
Prohibitions of English-Language Literacy Requirement for
Citizens Educated in American Schools (Section 4(e))127

Any citizen educated in an American-flag school in which classroom instruction
is given in a language other than English (e.g., a public school in Puerto Rico in
which instruction is given in Spanish) may not be denied the right to vote because he
or she cannot meet an English-language literacy requirement.
Prohibits Intimidation of Any Qualified Person from Voting
(Section 11)

Section 11 prohibits any person whether acting under color of law or otherwise
from
(1) failing or refusing to permit any qualified person from voting in general,
special, or primary federal elections;128
(2) refusing to count the vote of a qualified person; or
(3) intimidating any one attempting to vote or any one who is assisting a person
in voting under certain provisions of this act.
Bilingual-Election Requirement (Section 203)129
A state or political subdivision in which the Census Bureau determines that
citizens of voting age who number more than 10,000 or who comprise 5% of a single
language minority and whose illiteracy rate (failure to complete the 5th grade) is
126 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.
127 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1a.
128 That is, office of the President, the Vice President, presidential elector, Member of the
United States Senate, Member of the House of Representatives, Delegates or Commissioners
from the territories or possessions, and the Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico.
129 42 U.S.C. 1973aa-1a.

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higher than the national illiteracy rate must be provided with election materials and
assistance in the language of the applicable minority as well as in English. If more
than 5% of the American Indian or Alaska Native citizens of voting age on an Indian
reservation that is either partially or wholly within a political subdivision are
members of a single language minority and are limited-English proficient, then
bilingual services must be provided them. Only members of a language minority
who cannot read English well enough to use English-language election materials are
counted. This bilingual election requirement will expire on August 6, 2032.130
Data Used to Determine Jurisdictions Covered By Bilingual
Election Assistance Requirements. New provisions of the VRA require that
instead of using census data exclusively, that data to determine whether a state or
political subdivision is covered by the bilingual election assistance requirements be
based on “the 2010 American Community Survey census data and subsequent
American Community Survey census data and subsequent American Community
Survey (ACS) data in five-year increments, or comparable census data.”131
Litigation Expenses (Section 14(e))132
At the court’s discretion, the prevailing party (other than the United States) can
be allowed a reasonable attorney’s fee as well as reasonable expert fees and other
litigation expenses incurred as part of any action or proceeding to enforce the VRA.
Nationwide Literacy Test Ban (Section 201)133
Every jurisdiction in the country is forbidden to impose a literacy test or device,
such as a voucher requirement, as a condition for voter registration.
Registration and Voting Statistics (Section 207)134
The Census Bureau is to compile statistics in every covered jurisdiction showing
the extent to which all citizens of voting age and all such citizens by race, color and
national origin registered and voted in every congressional election after January 1,
1974. It is also to compile these statistics in any jurisdiction and for any election
designated by the U.S. Civil Rights Commission. No person whom the Census
Bureau questions may be compelled to state his or her race, color, national origin,
political party affiliation or how he or she voted.
130 Jurisdictions covered under Section 203 are listed in 28 C.F.R. Pt. 55.24, Appendix. The
listing indicates the applicable minority language for each jurisdiction.
131 120 STAT. 581.
132 120 STAT 581.
133 42 U.S.C. 1973aa.
134 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-5.

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Limitation of Residence Requirements for Voting (Section
202)135

No state may deny any citizen the right to vote in a Presidential election if he or
she registers to vote at least 30 days prior to the election. If a citizen moves to
another state after the 30th day preceding a Presidential election, that person may
vote in his or her former state.
If a citizen applies for an absentee ballot seven days before a presidential
election, then no state may deny him or her the right to vote in the election.
General Prohibition of Discriminatory Voting Laws (Section
2)136

Section 2 prohibits any state or political subdivision of a state from putting into
effect an election law that results in a denial or abridgment of voting rights on
account of race, color or language-minority (American Indian, Alaskan Native, Asian
American or of Spanish heritage) status.
A court may find a violation of Section 2 if a protected class is disadvantaged
by official and social discrimination and either political nominating processes or a
method of election denies to the protected class equal opportunity to elect to office
candidates of its own choice. Section 2 does not grant to any protected class a right
to elect a number of candidates to public office in proportion to the percentage that
class comprises of the total electorate.
Civil Actions to Enforce Compliance (Section 12(d))137
Section 12(d) authorizes the Attorney General to seek compliance enforcement
through the federal district courts.
Presidential Election of 2000
On November 7, 2000, American citizens went to the polls to cast their votes
for President of the United States. Not everyone’s vote, however, was counted.
Some charge that election irregularities and minority vote dilution involving African
Americans, ethnic groups such as Hispanics and Haitians, as well as white Americans
that occurred in jurisdictions in a number of states, effectively disfranchised
thousands of citizens. Although other states have been accused of having voting
irregularities, the state of Florida has come under particular scrutiny. A number of
investigations into the election procedures and experiences of voters have been
135 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1.
136 42 U.S.C. § 1973b.
137 42 U.S.C. § 1973(j)(e).

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conducted by civil rights groups, the state of Florida, the federal government, and the
media.
NAACP Hearing
Because of the kind and extent of alleged voting irregularities that were reported
to elected officials and civil rights organizations, the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) held a hearing in Florida on November
11, 2000. It promised to hold hearings on the election experiences of voters in
Michigan, California, Massachusetts, Missouri and, perhaps, Maryland. Based on
testimony provided by some Floridians of their experiences on election night,
national civil rights organizations such as the NAACP, Lawyers Committee for Civil
Rights under Law, the Advancement Project, People for the American Way, and the
American Civil Liberties Union, among others, alleged that provisions of the Voting
Rights Act of 1965, as amended, were violated. Problems broadly identified included
the registration process, election procedures, election equipment, training of election
staff, and discriminatory practices at polling precincts. Specifically, Florida election
officials were accused of:
! Failing to provide bilingual ballots;
! Purging of names, disproportionately of black individuals, from
county voting lists;
! Eliminating, in error, thousands of individuals from registration lists
on the grounds that they were felons;
! Training poll workers inadequately;
! Denying Haitian-Americans access to translators and language
assistance;
! Intimidating African Americans on their way to the polls by using an
unauthorized traffic checkpoint near a voting precinct;
! Failing to pick up some ballot boxes in African-American
neighborhoods;
! Refusing, when asked, to provide new ballots to voters who made
errors;
! Telling individuals that they had voted when they had not voted;
! Changing designated polling places without advance notice or
without adequate notice to the community;
! Sending individuals from one precinct to another only for the
individuals to find that they were not on the registration lists or that
it was too late to vote;
! Asking some minority voters for photo identification while not
asking the same of white voters;
! Denying some voters the right to vote because of minor
discrepancies between their names as they appeared on registration
lists and on the photo-ID they presented, such as the absence of a
middle initial;
! Failing to process registration applications and to provide voting
cards in a timely manner, resulting in some voters’ names not
appearing on the voting list;

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! Failing to send requested absentee ballots to individuals and then
refusing to let these same individuals vote when they appeared at the
precinct to vote; and
! Using antiquated and error prone equipment in minority precincts,
which resulted in a disproportionate number of African-American
votes not being counted.138
Florida Task Force
In response to the close presidential election of November 2000 and concerns
expressed regarding election procedures, standards, and technology used in counties
in Florida, Governor Jeb Bush, on December 14, 2000, through Executive Order
Number 00-349, created the Select Task Force on Election Procedures, Standards and
Technology (hereafter, Task Force on Election Procedures). By March 1, 2001, the
Task Force on Election Procedures was to have studied and have written policy
recommendations and/or proposed legislation to improve the election procedures,
standards, and technology used in Florida counties. Governor Bush stated that the
U.S. Department of Justice was the appropriate body to address complaints of
residents that some polls were closed even though individuals were still in line to
vote, that election officials used lists that they knew were inaccurate to remove
individuals from voting rolls, and that on election night law enforcement officers
conducted traffic stops near some black precincts. Given the tight schedule within
which it had to operate, the Governor advised the Task Force on Election Procedures
to limit its scope and come up with a series of recommendations for the Florida
legislature.”139
At its first meeting on January 2001, several members of the Task Force on
Election Procedures made recommendations, among which were to:
! offer provisional ballots to persons whose voting registration was
questioned;
! end state runoff elections to extend the time between primary and
general elections;
! replace antiquated voting systems that used punch cards, paper
ballots, or lever-operated voting machines with optical scanners; and
! create a statewide database that allowed instant verification of a
voter’s registration in the state.
Estimates of the cost of providing election equipment that would minimize the
difficulty individuals had in casting their votes included a total of $45 million to
provide an optical scanning ballot system in each of the 4,555 precincts in Florida
138 Press Release, Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, January 10, 2001, at
[http://www.lawyerscomm.org/2005website/publications/press/press011001statement.html].
139 Klas, Mary Ellen, “Election Officials Urge Purchase of Optical Scanners,” Palm Beach
Post
, January 9, 2001, p. 1A.

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and $200 million for a statewide database that would verify instantly the registration
status of a voter in the state.140
Final Report of Florida Task Force. In March 2001, the Select Task Force
on Election Procedures, Standards and Technology submitted its final report to
Governor Jeb Bush. Its major recommendations addressed upgrading the voting
system technology, recount and vote certification issues, voter registration and
absentee voting. The Task Force recommended: a certified voting system based on
a minimum standard of precinct-tabulation optical scan technology; a state grant or
loan program for counties to lease or purchase precinct-tabulation optical scan
technology; decertification of punch card, mechanical lever, and manual paper ballots
and central-tabulation optical scan voting systems for the 2002 election; and
continuing review of new voting systems, such as touch-screen technology for use
in future elections.
For recount and vote certification issues, the recommendation was to pass
legislation which provides that a machine count of votes is presumed correct unless
it can be shown clearly that there is a machine tabulation error; only ballots not
counted by otherwise properly functioning machines would be subject to manual
recounts; manual recounts would apply to all counties involved in multi-county
district, statewide, and federal elections; a clear threshold for invoking a manual
recount process that is distinct from a need to determine the outcome of an election
be statutorily established; manual recounts would apply to an entire county rather
than selected precincts; and statutorily clarifies the basis upon which results of an
election may be contested.
For voter registration the Task Force recommended that $3 million be provided
to design a statewide centralized voter registration database.
The Task Force would repeal the statutory restrictions for voting an absentee
ballot; statutorily clarify that errors in absentee ballots should not automatically be
thrown out; and continue the absentee voting via the Internet for eligible voters who
are overseas.
While commending the report, Commissioner Chairperson Mary Frances Berry
said the election involved more than just poor technology but that voter
disenfranchisement appeared to be at the heart of the issue. “It is not a question of
a recount or even an accurate count, but more pointedly the issue is those whose
exclusion from the right to vote amounted to a ‘No Count.’”141
Florida Election Law. On May 9, 2001, Governor Jeb Bush signed into law
the Florida Election Reform Act of 2001. The legislation for the most part included
many of the recommendations of the Task Force on the Election. The law’s
140 Iorio, Pam, “Election Officials Urge Purchase of Optical Scanner Recommendations
Could Cost $245 Million,” Palm Beach Post, January 9, 2000, p. 1A.
141 World Socialist Web Site, White, Jerry, “U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Charges
“Voter Disenfranchisement...at Heart” of Bush Victory in Florida,” March 10, 2001, at
[http://www.wsws.org/articles/2001/mar2001/vote-m10.shtml]

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provisions: require the use of precinct-based voting technology with touch screen
systems permitted which allow a voter to correct mistakes made while voting;
prohibit punch card and other antiquated voting systems; provide funding for
modernizing voting equipment, educating voters, training poll-workers, and to
develop a statewide centralized voter registration database by June 2002; allow a
provisional ballot to be counted; clarify and provide standards for recounting votes;
and require the posting of a Voter’s Bill of Rights and Responsibilities in each
polling place in the state.
Federal Action
Both the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights
(CCR) provided a federal presence in Florida. DOJ reviewed a number of allegations
of voting irregularities in the state. At a press conference on March 7, 2001, Attorney
General Ashcroft revealed his voting rights initiative. He recommended the
appointment of a senior counsel who would examine the 2000 elections for good
practices to share with states and local governments in their voting reform efforts.
He also offered to share DOJ’s 35 years of experience on voting issues with states
and local governments. In coordination with local governments, he supported
increasing DOJ’s assistance in monitoring and observing elections. In addition, the
Attorney General increased the number of attorneys in the Voting Section of DOJ
from 36 to 44. In response to the thousands of complaints of citizens and
organizations of voter irregularities, he stated that DOJ would investigate and
prosecute if provisions of the Voting Rights Act or the National Voter Registration
Act were violated. When asked if in DOJ’s review of voting irregularities it found
fraud, the Attorney General declined comment.142
On January 11 and 12, 2001, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, in trying to
determine if any violations of the Voting Rights Act occurred during the November
2000 elections, held hearings in Tallahassee, Florida. The Commission questioned
Governor Jeb Bush, Secretary of State Katherine Harris, State Attorney General
Robert Butterworth, Director of Florida Division of Elections Clayton Roberts, and
some county election supervisors on election procedures in the state, including
interacting with election supervisors, training staff, educating voters, handling
complaints of fraud, and recounting ballots. Some citizens testified that they had
problems trying to vote at different stages of the process. Attorney General
Butterworth’s office received 2,500 complaints from voters on use of the butterfly
ballot, an unauthorized traffic checkpoint that was near a voting precinct, and poll
workers’ refusal to provide on request second ballots to voters.
Governor Bush testified that the Florida Secretary of State, not his office, was
responsible for carrying out elections. Secretary of State Harris said that her office
was responsible for candidates’ qualification for state and federal offices and for
district elections that involved more than one county, for campaign finance reports,
and for maintaining a central voter file. She directed questions to the elections
director, Clayton Roberts, who implemented state election codes and handled daily
142 Attorney General John Ashcroft, U.S. Department of Justice, News Conference, March
7, 2001.

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operations. Mr. Roberts, on the other hand, stated that control of local elections was
the responsibility of county elections supervisors.143
Some election supervisors complained that Secretary Harris’s office did not
provide financial assistance for non-partisan voter education projects or pay for
mailing sample ballots as requested. Mr. Roberts testified that the state spent about
$7,000 for voter education efforts and several hundred thousand dollars for a voter
fraud hot line. According to Ion Sancho, Leon County election supervisor, this
compared to $30 million that Florida spent some years on educating people on how
to play Lotto.144 When questioned about difficulties citizens encountered in trying
to vote, including vote recounts, and the role of the Secretary of State, Roberts
replied that while Secretary Harris had statutory responsibility to set standards for
conducting elections and any recounts, she lacked the legal authority to set those
standards, so she didn’t set any.145
Commission Chairperson Mary Frances Berry stated that intent as a motive was
not necessary to rule that violations of the Voting Rights Act occurred; rather, a
pattern of neglect and/or incompetence would suffice. Although CCR cannot apply
specific remedies, it can recommend civil and/or criminal penalties for persons
responsible for civil rights violations.146
Final Report of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. The Commission
on Civil Rights released its report on June 8, 2001. The report was endorsed by eight
of the 10 commissioners. The findings of the report were based on three days of
hearings, interviews with over 100 witnesses and the review of over 118,000
documents. While not finding “conclusive evidence” that Florida officials conspired
to disenfranchise voters, the Commission charged Governor Jeb Bush and his
secretary of state, Katherine Harris, with “gross dereliction” of duty for ignoring the
problem despite “mounting evidence” of it. Harris’ rejection of a budget proposal
to spend $100,000 for voter education is cited. The report found the extraordinary
feature in the Florida election to be widespread voter disenfranchisement, not the
dead-heat contest. The report concluded that Florida’s electoral system was unjust,
inept, and inefficient, which resulted in the disenfranchisement of thousands of black
residents. The Commission found that black voters were disproportionately the
victims of faulty voting equipment, erroneous purging of voter lists, switching of
polling places at the last minute, and potential intimidation by the presence of police
at heavily black voting precincts. Blacks, who were 11% of voters statewide,
comprised 54% of votes rejected during the Florida election. Further, it found that
some Hispanic and Haitians voters were denied access to ballots in their native
143 U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, hearings held in Tallahassee, Florida, C-SPAN,
January 11-12, 2001; St. Petersburg Times, January 12, 2001, p. 1A.
144 Pressley, Sue Anne, “Florida Panel: Money Key to Election Reforms,” Washington Post,
January 10, 2001, p. A3.
145 The Nation, at [http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20010716&s=lantigua0115].
146 Robinson, Andrea, “Governor Refuses Blame for Florida Election Problems,” Miami
Herald
, January 12, 2001.

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tongue or bilingual assistance by poll workers.147 Some specific findings of the
report were:
! black voters were nearly 10 times as likely as whites to have their
ballots rejected;
! there were no clear guidelines to protect eligible voters from being
erroneously purged from the state list of felons, people with dual
registrations and the deceased;
! election supervisors in counties with the worst problems failed to
prepare adequately for the election or to demand adequate resources;
and
! the Florida Division of elections failed to educate voters on how to
vote.148
Commission Chairperson Mary Frances Berry stated that she hoped the report
findings would encourage both the state of Florida and Congress to initiate reforms.
Berry wanted the Justice Department to probe further and determine whether the
obstacles minority voters encountered while trying to vote constituted a violation of
the Voting Rights Act. In addition, she wanted DOJ to get Florida officials to act,
either by taking them to court or by getting a voluntary agreement from them not to
let this be repeated. The office of the Attorney General of Florida said that it was
investigating allegations of civil rights violations and would give “due consideration”
to the Commission’s report. A spokesman for the Department of Justice said that
thousands of complaints from citizens were investigated and by early January, all but
12 of them had been closed. Those complaints still under review involved possible
violations of the Voting Rights Act. The Justice Department was trying to determine
if a lack of bilingual ballots and an insufficient number of Spanish-speaking poll
workers prevented some Spanish-speaking voters from casting a ballot. In Osceola
County, with an Hispanic population of 29%, the election supervisor refused to print
ballots in Spanish.149
Two dissenting members of the Commission charged it with using
“inflammatory language” and stated that its findings were not supported by facts.
They cited blacks’ lower education levels, the high volume of voters, and in
particular, the high volume of first-time voters, who they claimed always made more
mistakes. Another criticism offered by others was that the report claimed that blacks
suffered from inferior voting equipment; a charge that was refuted in a study by
Stephen Knack and Martha Kropf. The Washington Post conducted a computer
147 The Guardian, (Manchester, UK), Borger, Julian, “Jeb Bush Blamed for Unfair Florida
Election: Civil Rights Commission Says Minorities Were Disenfranchised by Governor’s
‘Gross Dereliction’ in Ignoring Problems,” June 6, 2001, p. 1.10
148 The Washington Post, Pierre, Robert E. and Peter Slevin, “Fla. Vote Rife With
Disparities, Study Says Rights Panel Finds Blacks Penalized,” June 5, 2001, p. A01.
149 Wall Street Journal, Calmes, Jackie, “Rights Report on 2000 Vote Fuels Debate Clouded
by Ambiguities,” June 11, 2001, p. A.24. See “Who Uses Inferior Voting Technology?” by
Stephen Knack and Martha Kropf; The Washington Post, Pierre, Robert E., “Rights Panel
Duo Fault Report; GOP Appointees Say Findings of Bias Are not Defensible,” June 6, 2001,
p. A.07.

CRS-44
analysis of the election which revealed that the more black and Democratic a
precinct, the more likely it was to suffer high rates of invalidated votes.”150
Spokespersons for some civil rights organizations found the Commission’s
report consistent with their findings. Barbara Arnwine of the Lawyers Committee
of Civil Rights Under Law said that the action of state authorities was “a violation
of the fundamental trust that we all give to state-elected officials to protect our right
to vote.” Kweisi Mfume of the NAACP commented that the report “underscores
officially what most of us have known all along.”151
Media Review
One estimate of the number of votes undercounted (ballots where no vote for
president was recorded) in Florida was between 40,000 and 60,000. The Miami
Herald
and its parent company, Knight Ridder, hired BDO Seidman, a national
accounting firm, to conduct an in-depth review of ballots in all of Florida’s 67
counties. The Palm Beach Post contributed to the cost of reviewing ballots in
Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties and conducted an independent review of
ballots in Martin and St. Lucie counties. The Assistant Managing Editor of the
Herald, Mark Seibel, said the purpose of the effort was “to provide an answer to
people who are wondering what would have happened if the U.S. Supreme Court had
not stepped into the Florida election.” The Herald permitted reporters to observe the
count in all counties. Only the results of BDO Seidman’s observations were
reported. While there was no deadline for completing its project, the paper hoped to
finish before the Florida legislature met in March 2001.
A group of news organizations and Florida newspapers contracted with the
National Opinion Research Center (NORC), a University of Chicago survey research
organization, to conduct an “inventory” of Florida’s 180,000 uncounted ballots “to
better understand what went wrong” and “document history.” These ballots included
both undervotes and overvotes, that is, two or more votes for president.152 This
consortium was composed of the Associated Press, Tribune Publishing newspapers
including the Sun-Sentinel and the Orlando Sentinel, the New York Times, the Wall
Street Journal
, the Washington Post, CNN, the St. Petersburg Times, and the Palm
Beach Post
. The estimated cost of this study was at least $500,000.153
As a result of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, initially, the
consortium of print and television media postponed the scheduled analysis of
disputed ballots from the presidential election because it was believed that the
150 Ibid; The Washington Post, Pierre, “Fla. Vote Rife With Disparities,” June 5, 2001, p.
A01.
151 The Guardian, (Manchester,UK), Borger, Julian, “Jeb Bush Blamed for Unfair Florida
Election,” June 6, 2001, p. 1.10.
152 Brinkley-Rogers, Paul, “News Units Hire Researcher for Second Study of Ballot,”Miami
Herald
, January 10, 2001.
153 Ibid.

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disclosure might cause political partisanship at a time of national crisis.154 As
reported in The New York Times on November 12, 2001, the findings of the
consortium study, which examined many hypothetical ways of recounting Florida
ballots, differed depending on the method employed. Two examples of methods used
follow. If the recount of disputed ballots were carried out as the Florida Supreme
Court ordered, which the U.S. Supreme Court halted, then Mr. Bush would have won
by 493 votes. An examination of undervotes and overvotes that voting machines
rejected revealed that 24,619 ballots could have been interpreted as legal votes. Had
a statewide-recount been conducted (which Mr. Gore rejected as impractical), then
Mr. Gore would have been declared the victor. The consortium study, in providing
a comprehensive review of uncounted ballots in Florida, hoped to contribute to the
creation of more accurate and reliable voting systems.
Lawsuits
Lawsuits were filed by various civil rights groups in state and federal courts
challenging voting policies and practices in some states’ electoral processes. On
January 10, 2001, the NAACP and other civil rights organizations filed a class action
lawsuit (NAACP v. Katherine Harris, et al), in the U.S. District Court Southern
District, (Miami) against Katherine Harris, Clayton Roberts, elections supervisors
from seven counties, and Choicepoint, Inc.155 Plaintiffs maintained that electoral
practices in Florida violated the l4th Amendment and both federal and state voting
rights statutes. They contended that in predominantly black precincts names were
wrongfully purged from registration lists, voter registrations were improperly
processed, foreign-language assistance was not provided for voters who requested it,
and antiquated voting equipment was used. According to NAACP, all of these
practices violated the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended. Plaintiffs were not
seeking to overturn the election results; rather, they said that they wanted to restore
integrity to the electoral process in the state. Improvements in the electoral process
that they wanted included eliminating unreliable voting equipment and replacing it
with reliable and uniformly administered voting systems and procedures, maintaining
a list of inactive voters at polling places, providing an alternative method for
individuals whose names do not appear on the registration list, informing individuals
at polling places of their rights to assistance, and appointing federal examiners
(pursuant to provisions of the Voting Rights Act) in each of the defendant counties
for the next 10 years.156
154 See [http://dir.salon.com/news/feature/2001/09/29/democracy/index.html].
155 Choicepoint, Inc. is the firm that provided the Secretary of State of Florida a database of
persons identified as ineligible to vote because they were felons. The use of this list is
alleged to have resulted in the erroneous removal of thousands of individuals from voter
registration lists in the state.
156 Yee, Ivette M., “Civil-rights Suit Seeks Voting Overhaul,” Miami Herald, January 11,
2001.

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Lawsuits filed in Illinois157 and Georgia158 by the American Civil Liberties
Union and others charged that both the equal protection clause of the 14th
Amendment and the Voting Rights Act were violated during the recent election. The
suits focused on the quality of counting devices used in elections in the states and the
high rate of disqualification of ballots that occurred in precincts with large black
populations.159
The Douglass Institute of Government (DIG), however, challenged the
constitutionality of Florida’s presidential electors. According to DIG, the disparate
impact on African American voters in not having their votes counted in the
presidential election violated their due process rights and the right to equal protection
under the law — rights that Sections 1 and 2 of the 14th Amendment protect. DIG
asserted that redress is provided in Section 2 of the 14th Amendment. That is, the
slate of Florida’s presidential electors should have been reduced in proportion to the
protected class of disfranchised voters’ population of the state.
On December 29, 2000, Asa Gordon and Lawrence D. Jamison, members of
DIG and residents of the District of Columbia, filed suit (Gordon v. Albert Gore,
Jr.,-President of the U.S. Senate
(l:00CV03112) in the U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia to enjoin Albert Gore, Jr., President of the Senate, from
counting the full slate of Florida’s presidential electoral votes in Congress on January
6, 2001. DIG claimed that to allow Florida’s full slate of presidential electors to be
counted would have diluted and diminished the rights of presidential electors from
states that conformed with the 14th Amendment. On January 4, 2001, Judge Royce
C. Lamberth, the presiding judge, ruled that the plaintiffs lacked standing to maintain
the action and therefore were unlikely to have success based on the merits of the case.
Further, he questioned whether the ultimate relief that plaintiffs sought was a
political question because Congress would have to provide the relief.
Policy Questions
Have provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended been
violated? Several groups investigated the presidential election process in Florida
and came to different conclusions on what had transpired. Some civil rights
organizations held hearings in Florida and concluded that provisions of VRA had
been violated. Their investigations of Florida’s election process found flaws in the
registration process and in election procedures and equipment, inadequate training
for election staff, and discriminatory practices at polling precincts. In examining the
presidential election process, the Florida Task Force recommended changes to correct
weaknesses in the voting system technology, and registration and absentee voting
procedures. While the CCR did not find “conclusive evidence” that Florida officials
157 U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Black v. McGuffage (01C 0796);
U.S. District Court, Eastern Division (del Valle v. McGuffage); and Circuit Court of Cook
County, Illinois, County Department, Chancery Division, Tully v. Orr (01 CH 00959)
158 State of Georgia, Superior Court of Fulton County, Andrews v. Cox et al. (2001CV
32490).
159 Election Administration Reports, vol. 31, no. 2, January 22, 2001, pp. 1-3.

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conspired to disenfranchise voters, it identified the major feature of the presidential
election in that state as the disenfranchisement of thousands of black voters.
According to the Department of Justice, after reviewing allegations of voting
irregularities in the presidential election of 2000, it has authorized five lawsuits
including three in Florida. It has closed 10 investigations in Florida.
Was the response to allegations of voting irregularities and minority vote
dilution timely? Some critics of the federal response to allegations of minorities
being discriminated against by election personnel charged that too much time elapsed
before the Department of Justice initiated its review. Some suggested that there
should be time frames within which DOJ must begin its investigation of voting
irregularities and respond to allegations of violations of VRA. Another proposal was
that DOJ should be required to intervene when the U.S. Attorney General receives
a designated number of written complaints from residents of a voting jurisdiction
who believe that they were denied the right to vote.
Are additional penalties needed to discourage future violations of VRA?
It was argued that present penalties for violations of the act are insufficient to prevent
future incidents as alleged to have occurred in the presidential election of 2000.
Proponents of this argument believed measures were needed to reduce or prevent the
likelihood of such incidents recurring. They suggested that Section 2 of the 14th
amendment be made a federal statute. That is, a state’s slate of presidential electors
would be reduced in proportion to the protected class of disfranchised voters’
population of the state. Opponents of this action stated that the VRA worked during
the election. They claimed that problems with voting were not because of fraud
directed specifically at minority voters covered by provisions of VRA; rather,
mechanical problems, lack of funding, and insufficient training of personnel caused
the voting irregularities. They pointed out that many states had established
commissions, had considered proposals, and, in some cases, had passed legislation
to address voting difficulties that were experienced during the presidential election
of 2000. Therefore, they concluded that federal intervention of this kind was
unnecessary.
107th Congress
Many legislative proposals to address electoral reforms were introduced in the
107th Congress.160 Bills, however, that would have changed provisions of the Voting
Rights Act included H.R. 280 (King), H.Res. 139 (Cummings), and S. 738 (Smith,
Bob).
On January 30, 2001, Congressman King introduced H.R. 280, the National
Language Act of 2001. This bill would have provided that English be the official
160 For a detailed account of the issue of electoral reform, see CRS Report RL30804, The
Electoral College: An Overview and Analysis of Reform
, by L. Paige Whitaker; CRS Report
RL30747, Congressional Authority to Standardize National Election Procedures, by
Kenneth R. Thomas; and CRS Report RL30773, Voting Technologies in the United States,
by Eric A. Fischer.

CRS-48
language of the government of the United States, that is, that the federal government
conduct its official business in English, including publications, income tax forms,
and informational materials. The bill would have repealed the bilingual voting
requirements of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended. It would also have
terminated bilingual educational programs. Provisions of H.R. 280 would not have
required that English be used for religious purposes, for training in foreign languages
for international communication, for school programs designed to teach foreign
languages, or by persons over 62 years of age. The bill would not have prevented the
federal government from providing interpreters for persons over 62 years of age.
H.R. 280 was referred to the Committees on the Judiciary and on Education and the
Workforce.
H.Res. 139, Expressing the Sense of Congress Regarding Commitment to the
Voting Rights Act of 1965, was introduced by Representative Elijah E. Cummings
on May 9, 2001. The bill would have expressed the sense of Congress that it: would
condemn election procedures that dilute and disfranchise the minority vote and any
person acting under color of law or intimidating, or denying eligible persons the right
to vote; would recognize the importance of the 15th amendment; and would reaffirm
its commitment to the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Further, the bill would have
expressed the sense of Congress that the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights should
compile data on and investigate allegations of voting irregularities during the
November 7, 2000 presidential election and report on them to Congress and the
Department of Justice. H.Res. 139 would have expressed the sense of Congress that
a top priority of the President Attorney General, and the Department of Justice should
be: to eliminate minority vote dilution and disfranchisement; investigate thoroughly
all charges of election irregularities, minority vote dilution, and disfranchisement;
under provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 bring suit in federal court against
racially discriminatory practices, and federal criminal charges for voting fraud or
intimidation involving racial bias in local or state elections; and explore options to
prevent disfranchisement of voters in future elections. House Resolution 139 was
referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Senator Bob Smith introduced S. 738, Armed Forces Voting Rights Protection
Act of 2001, on April 6, 2001. This bill would have amended the Voting Rights Act
of 1965. It would have required that every vote cast by an absentee or overseas
member of the military be counted. S. 738 would have prohibited the
disqualification of such an absentee ballot for failure beyond the voter’s control (i.e.,
absence of a postmark, lack of a witness signature, address, or other identifying
information) if the ballot otherwise met timely submission requirements. The bill
would have provided for a fine of not more than $5000 and a maximum
imprisonment of five years or both for a person who disqualifies, refuses to count,
or otherwise negates the absentee or overseas vote of a member of the U.S. military
who is qualified to vote in a state. S. 738 was referred to the Senate Committee on
Rules and Administration.

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108th Congress
On February 26, 2003, Representative King introduced H.R. 931, The National
Language Act of 2003. H.R. 931 would have repealed bilingual voting requirements
of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended. The bill would have also terminated
bilingual educational programs. H.R. 931 would have provided that English be the
official language of the U.S. government. It would not have prevented, however, the
federal government from providing interpreters for persons over 62 years of age.
H.R. 931 was referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
109th Congress
The 109th Congress considered a number of proposals concerning the
reauthorization of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, as amended. Among them were
H.R. 997, the English Language Unity Act of 2005 (Steve King), H.R. 4408 the
National Language Act of 2005 (Peter King) and H.R. 9, the Fannie Lou Hamer,
Rosa Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and
Amendments Act, (Sensenbrenner). Both H.R. 997 and H.R. 4408 were referred to
their appropriate committees, but saw no action. Congressman Stearns offered
H.Amdt. 1145 to H.R. 5672, the Science-State-Justice-Commerce Appropriations
Act, FY2007. This amendment would have prohibited funding to enforce the
bilingual assistance provisions of VRA (Section 203). The House rejected H.Amdt.
1145 by a vote of 167 to 254. For further discussion of congressional activity on
these bills, see CRS Report RL33425, The Voting Rights Act of 1965, As Amended:
Reauthorization Issues
, by Garrine P. Laney and L. Paige Whitaker.)
Selected Provisions of the Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks,
and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization
and Amendments Act of 2006

On July 27, 2006, President Bush signed into law the Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa
Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and Amendments
Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-246; H.R. 9) (hereafter the VRA 2006), which amended
certain provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (VRA). It extended the
expiration date of the temporary provisions of the act, including the bilingual
provisions, for 25 years to 2032. The VRA 2006, however, requires the Comptroller
General to study the implementation, effectiveness, and efficiency of current
provisions of Section 203 (the bilingual provisions) of the VRA and alternatives to
the section’s current implementation; and report the results of the study to Congress
no later than a year after the act’s enactment. Further, the act amends those
provisions of Section 203 that required the Director of the Census Bureau to use a
formula that was based on census data to determine if a state or political subdivision
is covered by the bilingual election assistance requirements. New provisions of VRA
2006 delete “census data” and insert “the 2010 American Community Survey census
data and subsequent American Community Survey (ACS) data in five-year
increments, or comparable census data.” The ACS is a new national survey that is
designed to provide more recent data on demographic changes in communities.

CRS-50
The use of federal examiners in proceedings to enforce the VRA or to determine
a person’s eligibility to vote has changed. VRA 2006 repeals Sections 6, 7, and 9 of
the VRA that refer to examiners and substitutes observers.161 The act authorizes the
Director of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), after consulting the
appropriate department or agency, to designate suitable persons to serve as observers.
Observers are authorized to (1) enter and attend any place at which an election is held
and observe whether eligible persons are being denied the right to vote and (2) to
enter and attend any place where votes cast at any election are being counted and
observe whether they are being properly tabulated. Observers are also required to
investigate and report to the Attorney General and to the court that authorized their
appointment, if a court makes such an authorization.162
VRA 2006 amends Section 5 of VRA163 by revising the criteria by which a state
enacts or seeks to administer any voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or
standard, practice, or procedure with respect to voting and institutes an action in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia for declaratory judgment. Added
language requires that any voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or standard,
practice or procedure neither has the purpose nor will have the effect of denying or
diminishing the voting rights of U.S. citizens on account of race or color.
At present the VRA allows, at the court’s discretion, the prevailing party a
reasonable attorney’s fee; VRA 2006 amends Section 14(e)164 of the VRA to also
allow reasonable expert fees and other litigation expenses. For a fuller analysis of
VRA 2006, see CRS Report RS33425, The Voting Rights Act of 1965, As Amended:
Reauthorization Issues
, by Garrine P. Laney and L. Paige Whitaker.
110th Congress
Bills introduced in the 110th Congress that would amend the VRA include H.R.
745, H.R. 1281, H.R. 5971, S. 188 and S. 453.
Bilingual Provisions
H.R. 5971, American Elections Act of 2008 (Heller), would require that
during elections for federal office ballots be printed only in English, beginning in
November 2008. The bill would amend Section 203 of the Voting Rights Act (which
relates to election language assistance for certain limited-English citizens who are
Asian American or Pacific Islander, American Indian, Alaskan Native or of Spanish
heritage) to require covered jurisdictions to provide election language assistance only
for American Indians or Alaskan Natives. According to the bill language, the
justification for limiting election language assistance only to persons of these groups
161 42 U.S.C. 1973d, 1973e, and 1973g.
162 120 Stat. 579.
163 42 U.S.C. 1973c.
164 42 U.S.C. 1973l(e).

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is that the languages of American Indians or Alaskan Natives “predate the
establishment of the United States.”
H.R. 5971 would provide that for a covered political subdivision to obtain
release from provisions that require language assistance for American Indians and
Alaskan Natives, it may file an action against the United States in the U.S. District
Court for a declaratory judgement.
On May 6, 2008, H.R. 5971 was introduced and referred to the House
Committees on House Administration and the Judiciary.
Other bills that would repeal the bilingual voting requirements of the VRA are
H.R. 769, National Language Act of 2007 (Peter T. King) and S. 1335, S. I.
Hayakawa Official English Language Act of 2007 (Inhofe)
. Both H.R. 769 and
S. 1335 would make English the official language of the government of the United
States. These measures would require that the federal government conduct official
business in English, including publications, income tax forms, and informational
materials. They would also provide for the U.S. government to “preserve and
enhance the role of English as the official language of the United States of America.”
Both bills would provide for the following exceptions to the use of a language other
than English: (1) for religious purposes; (2) for training in foreign languages for
international communication; or (3) for programs in schools that are designed to
encourage students to learn foreign languages. Provisions of H.R. 769 and S. 1335
would not prevent the U.S. government from providing interpreters for persons over
62 years of age. The bills would require that public ceremonies for the admission of
new citizens be conducted solely in English. Provisions of the bills would not
preempt any state law.
H.R. 769 was introduced on January 31, 2007, and referred to the Subcommittee
on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education of the House Committee
on Education and Labor on May 18, 2007; and the Subcommittee on the
Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties of the House Judiciary Committee on
March 1, 2007.
Introduced on May 8, 2007, S. 1335 was referred to the Senate Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.
Modification of the Short Title of the Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa
Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act
Reauthorization and Amendments Act of 2006

Bills are being considered that would change the short title of the Fannie Lou
Hamer, Rosa Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and
Amendments Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-246). As originally introduced, S. 188, Fannie
Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act
Reauthorization and Amendments Act of 2006 (Salazar)
would add the name
“Cesar E. Chavez” to the title. S. 188 was referred to the Senate Judiciary
Committee on January 4, 2007; on February 8, 2007, the amended bill was reported

CRS-52
and would also add the names of Barbara C. Jordan and William C. Velasquez to the
title. The Senate passed S. 188, as amended on February 15, 2007.
Both Barbara C. Jordan and William C. Velasquez were recipients of the
Presidential Medal of Honor. Among other accomplishments, Jordan served as a
Member of Congress, where on the House Judiciary Committee she contributed to
passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. In addition to other civic activities
designed to assist the Hispanic community in enjoying all rights accorded American
citizens, William C. Velasquez founded the Southwest Voter Registration and
Education Project. On February 15, 2007, the Senate adopted S.Amdt. 267 (as
proposed by Senator Reid for Senator Salazar), which would add Dr. Hector P.
Garcia’s name to the short title. Dr. Garcia worked to educate Hispanics in
democratic principles and on how to apply those principles to enjoy fully their civil
rights.
H.R. 745, Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks and Coretta Scott King Voting
Rights Act Reauthorization and Amendments Act of 2006 (Jackson-Lee) would
add the names “Cesar E. Chavez and Barbara C. Jordan” to the title of P.L. 109-246.
On March 1, 2007, H.R. 745 was referred to the Subcommittee on the Constitution,
Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties of the House Judiciary Committee.
Deceptive Practices and Voter Intimidation Prevention
Both H.R. 1281, To Amend Title 18, United States Code, to Prohibit
Certain Deceptive Practices in Federal Elections, and for Other Purposes
(Emanuel)
and S. 453, the Deceptive Practices and Voter Intimidation
Prevention Act of 2007, (Obama)
would address allegations of voter fraud and
intimidation against voters (these allegations are discussed later in this report in the
section on the “Presidential Election of 2000”). Each bill would amend certain
provisions of the United States criminal code and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 that
relate to elections and political activities and intimidating, threatening, or coercing
a person to interfere with a person’s right to vote in any general, primary, run-off, or
a special election for the office of President, Vice-President, presidential elector,
Member of the Senate or House of Representatives, or Delegate or Commissioner
from a territory or possession. Both bills would add a new section called “Deceptive
Practices in Federal Elections” to Title 18 U.S.C. Chapter 29. Both H.R. 1281 and
S. 453 would prohibit a person from knowingly communicating or attempting to
communicate false election-related information to prevent another person from
exercising the right to vote; however, only S. 453 would also prohibit a person from
producing false information to prevent someone from voting in an election.
The bills would prohibit any person from communicating false information
regarding the
! time, place, or manner of the aforementioned federal elections;
! qualifications for or restrictions on voter eligibility for such
elections, if the person knows the information is false and intends
to prevent another person from voting;
! political party affiliation of a candidate running in a closed primary
election for any of these federal offices; or

CRS-53
! explicit endorsement by a person or organization of a candidate
running for office in any of these federal elections.
Under the original provisions of S. 453, a victim of the above prohibited
practices would have a private right of action to institute a civil action for a
permanent or temporary injunction, restraining order, or other order against anyone
who uses such deceptive acts to interfere with the right of a person to vote. In
comparison, for anyone who engages in or attempts these kinds of prohibited
practices, H.R. 1281 would not provide a private right of action to institute a civil
action against a person who engages in these deceptive practices. H.R. 1281 and S.
453 would provide a criminal penalty of a fine, up to five years imprisonment, or
both; S. 453 alone would provide for a specific maximum fine of $100,000. S. 453
would provide that if two or more persons conspire to commit these offenses, and
one or more act to effect the object of the conspiracy, the penalty would be either a
fine or no more than five years imprisonment.
S. 453 would amend 18 U.S.C. 594(a) to prohibit intimidation of voters by any
means, including electronic or telephonic communications. H.R. 1281 and S. 453
would authorize the U.S. Sentencing Commission to amend federal sentencing
guidelines and policy statements that apply to offenses relating to intimidation of
voters.
Both H.R. 1281 and S. 453 would allow a person to report to the Attorney
General any violations or possible violations of federal law relating to the
intimidation of voters or use of deceptive practices. The bills would provide for the
Attorney General to consider and review any such report and, if the report is
determined to have a reasonable basis, to undertake all effective measures necessary
to provide correct information to the affected voters and to refer the matter to the
appropriate federal and state authorities for criminal prosecution or civil action after
the election. S. 453 would require the Attorney General to take these same steps
immediately after receiving a report of the production, communication, or causation
of false information to interfere with the right of a person to vote but also to refer the
matter to the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice for prosecution.
H.R. 1281 and S. 453 would require the Attorney General, after consulting with
the Election Assistance Commission, state and local election officials, civil rights
organizations, voting rights and other community groups, to promulgate regulations
on corrective methods and means to address the report of false information being
provided to voters for a federal election. Further, in consultation with the Federal
Communications Commission and the Election Assistance Commission, the Attorney
General would be required to conduct a study on the feasibility of providing
corrective information to voters through public service announcements, the
emergency alert system, or other forms of public broadcast. The Attorney General
would be required to submit the results of the study to Congress no later than 180
days after enactment of this act.
H.R. 1281 alone would require the Attorney General to inform the public on the
responsibilities, contact information, and complaint procedures for reporting voting
violations and remedial actions by using the Internet, radio, television, and newspaper
advertisements.

CRS-54
Both H.R. 1281 and S. 453 would require the Attorney General to submit to
Congress, no later than 90 days after any primary, general, or run-off federal election,
a report compiling and detailing any allegations of voters being subjected to false
information. The following must be included in the report:
! detailed information on specific allegations of deceptive tactics;
! statistics on how many and the type of allegations made;
! geographic locations and populations affected;
! status of investigations of such allegations;
! corrective actions taken in response to these allegations;
! rationale for taking or not taking corrective actions concerning the
allegations;
! effectiveness of any corrective actions taken;
! whether a Voting Integrity Task Force was established;
! referrals of information to other federal, state, or local agencies; and
! any suits instituted in connection with such allegations for certain
violations of the Voting Rights Act as well as of Title 18 of the U.S.
Code that relate to deceptive practices.
S. 453 alone would provide for the Attorney General to withhold any information
that would unduly interfere with an on-going investigation. Under provisions of the
bills, the Attorney General may establish a Voting Integrity Task Force to carry out
requirements relating to the reporting of false election information and also would
be authorized to delegate responsibilities regarding this issue to the task force.
Committee Action on H.R. 1281 and S. 453
House. The House Judiciary Committee amended and reported H.R. 1281 on
March 29, 2007. The Committee adopted, by voice vote, Representative Lamar
Smith’s proposal to provide punishment for voter intimidation only if it occurs within
60 days of an election. On June 25, 2007, the House passed H.R. 1281 by voice vote,
as amended. On June 26, 2007, the measure was referred to the Senate Judiciary
Committee.
Senate. At a Senate Judiciary Committee markup of S. 453 on September 6,
2007, a number of amendments were proposed. Senator Schumer’s substitute
amendment included provisions to make it a federal crime for anyone to knowingly
provide false information to prevent a person from voting not only during a federal
election but a state or local one as well. Schumer’s amendment would also delete
original language in S. 453 that would allow a victim of deceptive practices a private
right of action to institute civil action, which is similar to language in the House-
passed bill, H.R. 1281.
The committee rejected Senator Specter’s proposed amendment to include
examples of alleged voting fraud that occurred in recent elections in the findings
section of S. 453, and a statement that addresses the impact of illegally cast votes on
the rights of legal citizens to vote and Congress’s responsibility to ensure that votes
are not cast illegally, because it was argued that S. 453 addresses deceptive practices,
not criminal fraud. The committee rejected Senator Hatch’s proposed amendment
to define “right to vote,” on the grounds that the courts had already defined the term.

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Another Hatch amendment that would criminalize facilitation of voting in an election
by someone who is ineligible, such as an illegal immigrant, was rejected.
The Senate Judiciary Committee reported S. 453 (S.Rept. 110-191), as amended
in the nature of a substitute, on October 4, 2007.