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    Home » Barack Obama Breaks His Silence on His Health – Free Press of Jacksonville
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    Barack Obama Breaks His Silence on His Health – Free Press of Jacksonville

    Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldJune 30, 20263 Mins Read
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    Barack Obama Breaks His Silence on His Health – Free Press of Jacksonville
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    Local Voices. Statewide Impact. Stay Informed with North Florida News

    Key takeaways
    • Supreme Court ruling narrowed race's role in redistricting, weakening Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and threatening Black political representation.
    • Courts now often demand a smoking gun showing discriminatory intent, making it harder for civil rights groups to challenge discriminatory maps.
    • Weakened protections affect state legislatures, school boards, county commissions, and judgeships, altering local policy and everyday life in Black communities nationwide.
    President Obama

    By Edward Henderson, California Black Media | U.S. Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D-CA-37), a member of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) whose district spans parts of Los Angeles County, joined fellow CBC member U.S. Rep. Troy Carter (D-LA-2) for a May 21 briefing with Black media outlets in California.

    The lawmakers highlighted what they describe as a mounting threat to Black political representation resulting from an April 29 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that weakened key protections under the federal Voting Rights Act.

    Kamlager-Dove and Carter warned that the decision, which narrowed the role of race in redistricting, is already reshaping congressional districts across the South and undermining Black voters’ ability to elect candidates of their choice.

    “While we are a super blue state, we have far to go when it comes to Black representation; we tend to take that for granted,” Kamlager-Dove said of California, noting that the Golden State has the fifth largest Black population in the country and only has three Black members of Congress.

    “While I support building coalitions, we have to make sure that as a Black community we are not yielding our power,” she added.

    Calling the fight “not unique to the South,” Carter urged Black communities nationwide to recognize the broader implications of the legal and political battles unfolding in Southern legislatures and courtrooms.

    The Supreme Court ruling centers on Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the portion of the law that prohibits voting systems or district maps that dilute the voting strength of racial minorities. For decades, Section 2 allowed civil rights groups to challenge district maps that weakened Black political representation even when lawmakers did not openly state discriminatory intent.

    Now, advocates fear that standard has fundamentally changed.

    “You have to have smoking gun evidence,” said Mitchell Brown, senior voting rights counsel at the Southern Coalition for Social Justice, during a recent media briefing hosted by American Community Media on May 15. “Legislators are not going to say the quiet part out loud.”

    The implications could stretch far beyond congressional elections, Brown said.

    Section 2 protections have historically applied not only to U.S. House districts, but also to state legislatures, school boards, county commissions, judgeships, and local governing bodies. Voting rights advocates warn that weakening those protections could reshape political representation throughout the South, particularly in states with large Black populations.

    “This is not just a Southern issue,” said Amir Badat, manager of Black Voters on the Rise and voting special counsel at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

    Badat described the current moment as part of a much longer historical pattern.

    Following the Civil War and Reconstruction, constitutional amendments expanded Black citizenship and voting rights across the South, leading to dramatic increases in Black political representation. But those gains were quickly met with violent backlash and the rise of Jim Crow laws designed to suppress Black voting through poll taxes, literacy tests, and other “race-neutral” restrictions.

    “This is the same move,” Badat said.

    Advocates also emphasized that the consequences of weakened voting protections extend into everyday life.

    Local elected offices such as school boards, city councils, county commissions, and judgeships often determine funding priorities, public safety policy, education standards, and infrastructure investments.

    “These are not abstract numbers,” Badat said. “These have real political consequences and policy consequences on people’s day-to-day lives.”

     

    https://blackpressusa.com/not-just-a-southern-issue-advocates-say-scotus-voting-rights-decision-has-already-started-to-reshape-black-political-power/

    Read the full article on the original site


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