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UUA Applauds Voting Rights Act Renewal

Green Gaia

Veteran Member
http://www.uua.org/news/2006/060721_vra.html

(July 21, 2006) The United States Senate acted yesterday to renew the Voting Rights Act of 1965. By a unanimous vote of 98-0, the Senate extended key provisions of the VRA, which was created to protect minority voting rights, and which has been called one of the most effective pieces of civil rights legislation in history. An identical version of the bill has already been approved by the House, and President Bush supported the legislation, so the Senate's vote marked the final hurdle. Reacting to the decision, UUA President William G. Sinkford wrote:
"As we rejoice in this victory for democracy, let us also take a moment to honor the courage and sacrifice of those who first fought for the passage of the Voting Rights Act forty years ago."
Unitarian Universalists have a unique historical connection to the Voting Rights Act. Many Unitarians and Universalists fought to advance the cause, including Viola Liuzzo and the Rev. James Reeb, who were killed while working for civil rights in Selma, Alabama, just a few months before the passage of the 1965 Act. In 2005, Rev. Sinkford was presented with New Democracy's James Reeb New Democracy Service Award in a Massachusetts ceremony.

Last year, two UU congregations joined an Atlanta voting rights march
commemorating the signing of the original Voting Rights Act. On Sunday, June 11, 2006, the Social Action Committee of Arlington Street Church in Boston co-sponsored a gathering on voting rights with Massachusetts Citizens for Voting Integrity. Topics included reports on the disenfranchisement of voters in Massachusetts, particularly among communities of color and immigrants, information on the national Voting Rights Act and the need for its renewal, and an examination of how redistricting has affected various groups.

As work on the VRA concluded yesterday, the UUA's Washington Office for Advocacy sent a letter to Congress urging passage of the District of Columbia Fair and Equal House Voting Rights Act (the "DC VRA") which would—for the first time ever—grant the District of Columbia a representative in Congress with full voting rights.


That letter stated, in part, "It is particularly appalling that thousands of Congressional employees—people who are serving their country as public servants—must choose between having voting representation in Congress or living in the District of Columbia. Nor is it ethical to disenfranchise the hundreds of thousands of DC residents who, in addition to deserving representation simply as US citizens, are particularly deserving because it is their lives and work that make it possible for Congress to function here.


"Two of the fundamental principles of the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations are respect for the worth and dignity of every person and the use of the democratic process. By denying one of the most basic elements of democratic governance, Congress devalues the worth and dignity of all DC residents. The lack of DC voting representation in Congress is unfair, unethical, and wrong."


You can act in support of voting rights!
  • Action Alert from the UUA Washington Office for Advocacy:
    The UUA encourages Unitarian Universalists to help support the DC Fair and Equal House Voting Rights Act (the "DC VRA"). The UUA General Assembly endorsed full DC voting rights in 1970. DC residents—including the staff of the Washington Office—need you to advocate on our behalf if this legislation is to go forward. We encourage you to read the article by Marion Patten, a DC Voting Rights Activist from River Road Unitarian Church, and take action.
 

robtex

Veteran Member
Here are some footnotes on the act. Basically the law eliminates literacy tests and poll taxes. It's measured affect, according to the links below was the increase in black partipation in voting. I think the law is a good thing as by definition a republic is a goverment where the people elect officals to represent them. If exclusionary clauses come about we start to drift from a republic towards an authoritarian goverment.

The definition of what constitutes a citzen may be paramount in the long-term of the bill as it may factor into future court cases over representation of visa holders, green carders and possibly illegals with long-term residency in the USA.

http://www.usdoj.gov/crt/voting/intro/intro_b.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voting_Rights_Act
http://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?flash=false&doc=100
http://www.usdoj.gov/crt/voting/intro/intro_c.htm
http://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?flash=true&doc=100&page=transcript
 
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