After defeating several amendments that would have neutered
legislation to renew key sections of the Voting Rights Act set to
expire next year, the U.S. House of Representatives finally passed the
Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act
Reauthorization and Amendments Act last week by a vote of 390-33. No
Democrat voted against the bill and Republicans approved it by a margin
of 192-33. The bill now moves to the Senate, where it is expected to
easily win approval before the August recess. We should never
forget the 33 members of the Hall of Shame: Jo Bonner and Terry Everett
of Alabama; Trent Franks and John B. Shadegg of Arizona; Wally Herger,
John T. Doolittle, Edward R. Royce, Gary G. Miller, Dana Rohrabacher,
John Campbell, all of California; Joel Hefly and Thomas G. Tancredo of
Colorado; Tom Price, John Linder, Lynn A. Westmoreland, Charlie
Norwood, Nathan Deal and Phil Gingrey, all of Georgia; Dan Burton of
Indiana, Iowa’s Steve King, Richard H. Baker of Louisiana, Roscoe G.
Barlett of Maryland, New Jersey’s Scott Garrett; Virginia Foxx and
Patrick T. McHenry of North Carolina; South Carolina’s J. Gresham
Barrett, John J. Duncan Jr. from Tennessee and six from Texas: Sam
Johnson, Jeb Hensarling, Joe Barton, K. Michael Conaway, Mac Thornberry
and Ron Paul. Not voting were Julia Carson, a Congressional Black
Caucus member from Indiana; Jo Ann Davis of Virginia, Lane Evans of
Illinois, Missouri’s Sam Graves, Michael McNulty from New York, Annie
M. Northup from Kentucky, Pete Sessions of Texas, Louise McIntosh
Slaughter of New York and Todd Tiahrt of Kansas. That any
member of Congress would vote against such important legislation would
be bad enough. But I have even less respect for the hypocrites who
voted for crippling amendments to the legislation and after those
efforts failed, voted for the final measure so that they could save
face. In an effort to gut the Voting Rights measure, four amendments were offered in the House. Amendment
4, proposed by Rep. Lynn Westmoreland (R-Ga.), would have the Attorney
General make an annual determination of whether certain jurisdictions
must meet the Section 5 preclearance requirement of the Voting Rights
Act as well as shift the burden of proving whether a community has
stopped discriminating from the jurisdiction to the Justice Department.
Amendment 8, sponsored by another Republican from Georgia, Charlie
Norwood, would use turnout figures from the three previous presidential
elections rather than past record of discrimination to determine which
states are covered under the Act. Based on figures from the 1996, 2000
and 2004 elections, it would essentially repeal Section 5 of the Voting
Rights Act. Amendment 7, sponsored by Republican Representatives
Steve King of Iowa, Candice Miller from Michigan, Ginny Brown-Waite of
Florida and Spencer Bachus of Alabama, would repeal Section 203 of
the Voting Rights Act that provides language assistance to voters who
have difficulty speaking English. And Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas)
proposed a reauthorization period of 10 years rather than 25. A
band of Southern legislators almost derailed the bill by claiming that
their region was being treated unfairly. However, Congressional
hearings showed Black voters were the real victims. Southern
members of Congress who supported both the Westmoreland and Norwood
amendments before voting for the final version of the voting rights
extension were: Robert B. Aderholt of Alabama; Florida’s Ginny
Brown-Waite, Cliff Stearns, Ric Keller, Adam Putnam, Connie Mack and
Dave Weldon; Jack Kingston from Georgia; Bobby Jindal and Rodney
Alexander from Louisiana; Mississippi’s Roger F. Wicker, Charles
Pickering and Gene Taylor; Walter Jones, Harold Coble, Sue Wilkins
Myrick and Charles Taylor, all of North Carolina; Henry E. Brown and
Joe Wilson of South Carolina; Texas’ Louie Gohmert, Ted Poe, Ralph
Hall, John Abney Culberson, Kevin Brady, Michael T. McCaul, Kay
Granger, Randy Neugebauer, Lamar S. Smith, Henry Bonilla and Kenny
Marchant and three Congressmen from Virginia, Virgil H. Goode Jr., Bob
Goodlatte and Eric Cantor. Seven Southern supporters of the final
bill voted for the Westmoreland amendment, but not the one offered by
Norwood. They were: Mike Roberts and Spencer Bachus of Alabama, Michale
Bilirakis and C.W. Bill Young of Florida, Louisiana’s Jim McCrery,
William L. Jenkins of Tennessee and John R. Carter from Texas. (For
a complete list of how every Congressperson voted on each amendment and
the final bill, go to my blog (no www) curryingfavor.blogspot.com). Three
co-sponsors of the amendment to repeal the language assistance
provision of the Voting Rights Act – Candice S. Miller of Michigan,
Ginny Brown-Waite of Florida and Spencer Bachus of Alabama – voted for
the final measure after their effort to kill that section of the
legislation was easily defeated. Evidently, lawmakers expected us
to be satisfied with their final vote and not be aware of their
disingenuous behavior. But they guessed wrong. And now that we are
aware of their efforts to dilute our political power, we should do what
the old lady in church tells us to do after reading the Sunday
announcements: govern yourselves accordingly.
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Bruce Gordon Hits it on the Numbers
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