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In 2011, does black political inclusion really still depend on protecting black candidates from white competition in race-based districts?
A statute to ensure the voting rights of minorities in 1965 has become a gerrymandering tool to further the interests of political parties and incumbent politicians.
American voters have turned a racial corner, and the law should reflect this change.
American voters have turned a racial corner, and the law should reflect this change.
Civil rights groups are trying to get the court to force states to increase the number of safe Democratic districts.
Edward Blum charts the degeneration of the Voting Rights Act from a law designed to remove voting barriers for African Americans to a frivolous, costly gerrymandering tool.
Gerrymanders are barriers to competitive, democratic elections. But the only thing worse than a gerrymander is a judge trying to fix one.




