Virginia, the Old Confederacy's Heart, Becomes a Voting Rights Bastion
For nearly 50 years, the state was subject to Voting Rights Act rules meant to deter racial discrimination. Those federal guidelines are now shredded, but Virginia just recreated them on its own.
By Reid J. Epstein and Nick Corasaniti
April 2, 2021, 3:00 a.m. ET
ARLINGTON, Va. Georgia has sharply limited voting access, making drop boxes less available and forbidding anyone to hand out water to voters in line. Florida and Texas are poised to advance similar legislation. Alabamas strict voter identification law is being used as a template elsewhere.
As states across the South race to establish new voting restrictions, Virginia is bolting in the opposite direction. The Democratic governor, Ralph Northam, this week capped a multiyear liberal movement for greater ballot access by signing off on sweeping legislation to recreate pivotal elements of the federal Voting Rights Act that were struck down by the Supreme Courts conservative majority in 2013.
Alone among the states of the former Confederacy, Virginia has become a voting rights bastion, increasingly encouraging its citizens especially people of color to exercise their democratic rights. In the last 14 months, the states Democratic-controlled General Assembly and Mr. Northam have together repealed the states voter ID law, enacted 45 days of no-excuse absentee voting, made Election Day a state holiday and enacted automatic voter registration for anyone who receives a Virginia drivers license.
Virginia, which for nearly 50 years had to submit changes to its elections to the federal government for approval under the Voting Rights Acts preclearance requirements, has now effectively imposed the same covenants on itself, an extraordinary step for a state with a long history of segregation and racially targeted voting laws.
more
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/02/us/politics/virginia-voting-rights-northam.html