Defenders of voting rights believe they can show a level of continuing, intentional discrimination that should once again make Alabama subject to the preclearance requirement of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
Deuel Ross, an attorney with the NAACP Legal Defense Fund who represents the plaintiffs seeking to protect the current map, said "This is sort of exactly the thing that Alabama and other states did before the Voting Rights Act — a court would find that there was some sort of discrimination in the way in which they were drawing maps or registering voters and the state would respond by essentially doing the same thing over again, but dressing it up in a slightly different outfit".
Attacks like this on what remains of the Voting Rights Act are going to get worse over the next few years. As voter suppression laws become increasingly targeted and gerrymandering more oppressive, our work to defend the right to vote must become smarter, stronger, and more accessible to everyone.
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