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Category Archives: Identity Politics
Voting Rights Act — A Glimmer of Hope
On Thursday, the United Supreme Court issued its opinion in Allen v. Milligan, a case in which Alabama voters challenged the state’s new congressional district lines under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. As people may remember, due to COVID and the resulting delay in the 2020 census, Alabama completed its redistricting process shortly before filing began. Although the voters quickly filed their case, and the three-judge panel quickly heard the challenge and issued its decision, a 5-4 majority decided that any change caused by any new lines issued by the judges would be too close to the start of the election process (but that the legislation changing the lines was not) for the judge-drawn lines to be used in the 2022 election. So the 2022 election was held under the new lines drawn by the legislature while the U.S. Supreme Court decided whether those lines were valid. In its ruling this week, five justices (with Justice Kavanaugh switching sides and Justice Jackson replacing Justice Breyer) upheld the trial court ruling.
To start with the legal considerations, Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act bars any voting practice or procedure that causes a protected group to “have less opportunity than other” groups “to elect representatives of their choice.” While Section 2 also contains language disavowing an express requirement of proportionality, previous cases have found that Section 2 applies to redistricting and that it requires those bodies charged with redistricting to consider whether the maps give sufficiently large racial and ethnic groups a fair shot at electing a proportionate number of members. Basically, this is done by drawing either “minority influence” districts (in which minorities are a large enough percentage of the voters that they can form a majority by aligning with like-minded non-minority voters) and “minority majority” districts. (in which the minority group is over 50% of the likely voters).
The current language in Section 2 was adopted in the early 1980s. The first major case applying Section 2 to redistricting devised a three-part test. First, the voters needed to show that minority voters are sufficiently concentrated that there is a reasonable map which would give them an additional minority influence or minority majority district. In equal protection cases, the Supreme Court has made clear that maps that grossly violate traditional considerations to force geographically dispersed minority enclaves into the same district are forbidden. Second, the voters must show that the minority group is politically cohesive. In other words, that a significant majority sees itself as one group and tend to support the same type of candidate. (For example, it might be harder to show that Asian voters are a group but easier to show that Vietnamese voters are a group.) Third, the voters must show that the majority group (almost always white voters) will oppose the candidate supported by the minority group. In other words, the last two parts require showing that racialized voting is still common in the jurisdiction.
Also posted in Civil Rights, Elections, House of Representatives, Judicial
Tagged Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, North Carolina, redistricting, Supreme Court, Voting Rights Act
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Native Americans and the Supreme Court
While most of the news coverage of Thursday’s decisions focused on Donald Trump’s financial records, the other case on Thursday may be just as big. In that case — McGirt vs. Oklahoma — the Supreme Court had to decide who had the authority to try Native Americans for criminal offenses. And the story behind that case is 200+ years of the troubled relations between Native Americans and the descendants of the immigrants who gradually took over all of the land that used to belong to the original settlers.
While the story predates the founding of the United States, for lawyers, the story begins in 1787. At that time — and for most of the next 100 years — there were two United States. First, there was the nominal United States with borders set by treaties with European nations (which at that time were the only ones that counted to the Framers other than a handful of countries bordering the Mediterranean). Then there was the real United States defined by the current extent of settlements. Just over that border were the native tribes. And, the early conflicts involving the colonies revealed that the tribes were potential enemies that could ally with foreign powers or potential allies in those struggles. Thus the Constitution treated the tribes as being somewhat similar to foreign countries or the individual states with the federal government having exclusive authority over dealings with the tribes.
The rest of the story from that point on is one of treaties made and treaties broken as the various tribes were compelled to surrender parts (or all) of their original lands in exchange for guarantees of title to specific lands. One of these tragic stories was the Trail of Tears with many of the tribes (the Five Nations) in the southeastern U.S. moved to what is modern day Oklahoma. In the latter part of the nineteenth century, a series of acts opened up first the rest of Oklahoma and then part of the lands set aside to the native tribes for settlement by non-tribe members. Around the same time, there were several key developments. First, there were “allotment acts” which converted much of tribal land into private property owned by tribe members which could then be sold to non-members. Second, the various territories into which the tribes had been moved became states. Third, Congress passed laws dealing with crimes committed by natives.
Also posted in Civil Rights, Judicial
Tagged Major Crimes Act, Muskogee (Creek) Nation, Native Americans, Supreme Court
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Music, Protests and Identity Politics: Reflections on a Theme
This past weekend marked the 50th anniversary of Woodstock. You knew that. W-XPN played the concert, stage whispers and all, for the entirety of the production You probably knew that, too. You may or may not know that I didn’t attend Woodstock because even though my cousin Steve got to go, and offered me a ride, my dad nailed me in my bedroom so that I couldn’t go. He thought I was too young. And, as an adult, I realize he was completely correct — but I STILL WANTED TO GO!!!!! Thanks, I feel better now.
For some reason, I felt a need to listen to the No Nukes album. That’s from the MSG concerts in 1979 protesting, with music, against nuclear proliferation.
So I am lost in my past…and thinking about what it was to protest then, the issues in play, and in so doing “Identity Politics” finally crystallized in my mind. The idea of “Identity Politics” has never sat well with me because I consider them to be unnecessarily divisive. I understand the idea, that “identity” defines people, but EVERYONE has an identity, and there are hopefully more things that unify us than separate us. Yeah, yeah, I have heard the blow-back that I don’t understand what it is to be African-American, and that’s true.