There's no greater demonstration of that fact than this simple fact: During the first five years of the Bush administration, the Justice Department's voting section only filed a single case alleging voting discrimination on behalf of African American voters. That's despite the fact that the section, part of the Civil Rights Division, was created mainly to protect African
American voters from discrimination.
But during that same time period, the section managed to file the first ever reverse discrimination case under the Voting Rights Act.
But during that same time period, the section managed to file the first ever reverse discrimination case under the Voting Rights Act.
That case, United States v. Ike Brown and Noxubee County, alleges that Brown, the chairman of Noxubee County's Democratic Executive Committee in Mississippi, has been trying to limit whites' participation in local elections. The case, filed in 2005, is currently being tried, and is likely to reach its conclusion later this month.
Joseph Rich, the chief of the voting section until he resigned in 2005, signed the complaint against Brown and told me that he thought that the case did have merit. But he said that it was "really a question of priority" for a section with limited resources. The political appointees in the section aggressively promoted the case, he said: "clearly they were very interested in this particular matter when it came up." Rich, who worked for the department enforcing civil rights laws for more than 35 years, has very publicly criticized the section he left.
Democrats are clearly animated about the issue. A House Judiciary subcommittee held a hearing on the voting section, during which Rich testified, last month, and chairman Jerold Nadler (D-NY) has vowed to press on with further investigation, saying "I realize the president has gotten a free ride for the last six years, but that is over."
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