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In 2011, does black political inclusion really still depend on protecting black candidates from white competition in race-based districts?
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.
The cases of Representatives Maxine Waters and Charlie Rangel reveal the corruption that is almost inevitable when any politician is given a job for life and the scandalous lack of accountability in the Congressional Black Caucus.
Most Americans are appalled not only by the notion of unequal enforcement of voter-intimidation cases, but by the whole politically correct edifice of affirmative action and racial preferences that has been constructed over the years.
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.
In early October, the Supreme Court will be presented with one of the most important voting rights cases of the last two decades.
Civil rights groups are trying to get the court to force states to increase the number of safe Democratic districts.



