Brennan Center for Justice<\/a>, in 2021 nearly 20 states enacted 30 laws to restrict voting. The Brennan Center also reports that 49 state legislatures have more than 400 bills pending to restrict the right to vote in some capacity. If passed into law, these bills, which disproportionally affect minority communities of color, will have a detrimental impact on the 2022 mid-term elections and the 2024 general elections.<\/p>\nIn our nation\u2019s founding documents there is no explicit, guaranteed federally protected right to vote for all citizens. Historically, this has left many marginalized communities susceptible to the widespread dangers of voter suppression. Despite the progress we have made as a society and the 19th and 20th century federal political and legal measures enacted to protect the voting rights of the most vulnerable citizens, this dark legacy of disenfranchisement remains embedded in our civil and political DNA. Reconstruction and Jim Crow era literacy tests, poll taxes, and property requirements have given way to new, pernicious forms of voter suppression like strict voter ID laws, eliminating accessible polling locations, and limiting early and Sunday voting opportunities.<\/p>\n
We are nearly one year removed from one of the most divisive and contentious elections in our nation\u2019s history. The 2020 election and the aftermath that lead up to the deadly January 6, 2021, Capitol Hill insurrection, demonstrated just how fragile our democracy is and how extreme our polarization has become. As stewards of this democracy, we must use our greatest strength, religious diversity, to establish moral common ground as we work to reimage a nonpartisan interfaith approach in our pursuit to secure, protect, and expand the right to vote for all Americans. Now is the time for our nation to pursue a shared moral vision of our future that is deeply rooted in our religious values.<\/p>\n
The right to vote and the integrity of the vote remain foundational pillars of our democracy. This belief has strong intellectual and ethical roots in many faith traditions. In nearly every faith tradition there are intersections between shared values, civic engagement and the movement to advance, secure and protect the right to vote. In the face of increased, rapid, and escalating disenfranchisement, the development of an effective, inclusive interfaith response that promotes the sacredness of the vote and mobilizes coalitions of interfaith citizens to champion the right to vote as a fundamental right can help fortify our democracy for future generations.<\/p>\n
Since the historic election and reelection of President Barack Obama, due in large part to a racially, ethnically and religiously diverse coalition of voters, there has been a national spotlight on the reemergence of voter suppression in this nation. In 2013, in the Shelby County v. Holder decision, the United State Supreme Court gutted the strongest provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, also known as the crown jewel of the civil rights movement. This decision removed a significant portion of federal protection and oversight that limited state sanctioned racially motivated voter discrimination. In many ways, this decision gave states, especially states with a long history of discrimination, the \u201cgreen light\u201d to enact discriminatory voting laws without the fear of federal intervention. In the 2014 mid-term elections, the first elections after the Shelby decision, thousands of potential voters were turned away due to the new voter suppression laws<\/a> in states across the South.<\/p>\nThis article was originally posted on January 11, 2022.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n \n