This time
around, the Court’s decision to render unconstitutional the section of the
Voting Rights Act that demands states with a history of discrimination against minority
voting rights to submit their plans for changing voting practices, most notably
electoral boundaries, for preclearance flies not only in the face of Congress
that has voted to extend the Act four times over the last forty years, but also
the disturbing results from last year’s congressional elections.
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In
defending the controversial decision, Chief Justice,
John Roberts reasoned that the country has changed and that “Congress must
ensure that the legislation it passes to remedy that problem speaks to current
conditions.”
Could
Justice Roberts possibly be referring to the Congress put into place by the
Great Gerrymander of 2012, where the Democrats received more votes for the
House of Representatives, yet Republicans won control of the House by a 234 to
201 margin?Without question, gerrymandering is a major form of disenfranchisement. For example, in the seven states where Republicans redrew the voting districts, 16.7 million votes were cast for Republicans and 16.4 million votes were cast for Democrats. This elected 73 Republicans and 34 Democrats, which accounts for the reversal of electoral outcome for the general election, the House majority for the Republicans, and the gridlock in Washington.
Effectively,
the Supreme Court decision has effectively made a bad situation worse, but this
should not come as a surprize. The
Robert’s Court is also responsible for the infamous Bush v. Gore decision that
stayed a judicial recount of the votes cast in Florida, thereby allowing George
Bush to steal the election in which he had less of the popular vote and most
probably fewer votes from the electoral college – an inconvenient truth that
needed to be suppressed by all means.
This is the
same Court that also rendered limits on the amounts of money that corporations
could spend during elections to be unconstitutional in the equally infamous,
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission.
Remarkably, the Roberts led court found that spending limits to be an
infringement on the right of corporations to engage in free speech, (how corporations
ever acquired this right, normally
limited to humans, speaks volumes about the political nature of the US
Supreme Court ) turning what should be an exercise in democracy into a jaded
fundraising and marketing campaign.Taken together, these three seminal decisions smack of empire because, when stripped to its essence, empire is nothing more than the political embodiment of unchecked greed, and if there is one thing that can reign in the insatiable appetite for wealth, it is the collective will of the majority of Americans; hence the need to undermine democratic outcomes, especially electoral results.
Presently, the greatest threat to America’s corporate plutocracy is the demographic change occurring in the population at large. In short, the growth in the number of Blacks and Hispanics in the US is rising, while the number whites relative to the population at large is shrinking. This does not bode well for the Republicans since Blacks and Hispanics overwhelmingly vote for Democrats. In fact, this demographic shift makes it more and more difficult to elect a Republican candidate to the presidency.
As a result,
in order to prevent a reversal of the flow of wealth extraction in the United
States – wealth flowing from the poor to the rich changing direction so that
money flows from the rich to the poor – the best that the Republicans can hope
for is to control the House of Representatives.
Combined, the Shelby County v. Holder (Voting Rights Act) and the Citizens
United decisions increase the capacity of America’s top 1% to do so and to consequently forestall
democratic rule in the US from occurring anytime soon.