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Renewing the Promise of Ending Voting Discrimination: A Return to an Effective Section 5 Retrogression Standard

http://www.flickr.com/photos/ari/2248827699/ The purpose of Professor Nathaniel Persily’s article, The Promise and Pitfalls of the New Voting Rights Act, is to present an interpretation of the discriminatory effects prong of the new section 5 that will have a greater probability of surviving constitutional scrutiny. In presenting this interpretation, Professor Persily addresses several major issues that delineate the contours of the new section 5 retrogression standard and its application to redistricting plans. Yet, upon closer examination, the proposed new interpretation is very similar to the old retrogression standard with an important difference. The proposed definition of “uniquely preferred candidate of choice” will diminish the opportunity of minority communities to prevent the implementation of redistricting plans that have a retrogressive effect on minority voting strength.

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The Paradox of Retrogression in the New VRA: Comment on Persily

The Court ruled in Georgia v. Ashcroft that states, when redistricting, could try to increase “substantive representation”—the degree of influence that minority voters have on policy outcomes—even at a possible cost to “descriptive representation”—the number of minority candidates elected to office. As reviewed in Nathaniel Persily’s article The Promise and Pitfalls of the New Voting Rights Act, Congress attempted to overrule Georgia v. Ashcroft in the 2006 Voting Rights Act Renewal Act (VRARA), claiming that the VRARA would return redistricting law to its pre-Ashcroft state and disallow tradeoffs between substantive and descriptive representation. It is still not clear how the new standards should be implemented, though, and Persily suggests that retrogression in descriptive representation be measured as the total expected number of minority candidates of choice elected to office, according to a given redistricting plan.

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The Constitutional Relevance of Alleged Legislative Dysfunction

The role of an election law scholar these days is much like that of an anthropologist specializing in the study of human sacrifice. At a certain point, some of us in the field suppress natural human impulses of disgust and revulsion and replace them with fascination and curiosity. How else does one stomach the pervasive partisan greed, the wild conspiracy theories, the actual conspiracies, the pretextual arguments, and the often vicious attempts to use the law for partisan and personal gain? My article The Promise and Pitfalls of the New Voting Rights Act may appear too descriptive and anodyne to some, because of its attempt to treat this important legislation as a phenomenon that needs to be explained before it can be judged. This Reply gives me the opportunity to offer some of the judgment that might have been lacking in the principal article and to reply to critics who have responded in print and those who have responded as part of litigation surrounding the constitutionality of the new Voting Rights Act (VRA).

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