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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, Following the Civil War, Congress adopted the | ||||||
3 | Thirteenth Amendment abolishing slavery, the Fourteenth | ||||||
4 | Amendment establishing the citizenship rights of all persons | ||||||
5 | born in the United States and requiring that no one be denied | ||||||
6 | due process or equal protection of the laws, and the Fifteenth | ||||||
7 | Amendment securing the right to vote for all citizens | ||||||
8 | regardless of a person's race, color, or former condition of | ||||||
9 | servitude; and
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10 | WHEREAS, Despite the enactment of these significant | ||||||
11 | constitutional commands, for nearly 100 years, states and local | ||||||
12 | jurisdictions passed laws and instituted practices designed to | ||||||
13 | circumvent the Civil War amendments; many states erected | ||||||
14 | barriers to African-Americans' access to the polls, including | ||||||
15 | infamous poll taxes and literacy or good character tests; | ||||||
16 | African Americans and those who advocated on their behalf often | ||||||
17 | were subjected to severe violence and intimidation, or in some | ||||||
18 | cases death, if they attempted to register to vote or cast a | ||||||
19 | ballot; and
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20 | WHEREAS, Confronted with aggressive and relentless | ||||||
21 | defiance of the Constitution, Congress enacted the Voting | ||||||
22 | Rights Act of 1965 in order to ensure that the rights | ||||||
23 | guaranteed by the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments were | ||||||
24 | enforced; and
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25 | WHEREAS, The Voting Rights Act of 1965 is widely viewed as | ||||||
26 | one of the most successful civil rights statutes ever enacted; | ||||||
27 | it bans literacy tests and poll taxes, outlaws intimidation | ||||||
28 | during the electoral process, authorizes federal election | ||||||
29 | monitors and observers, and creates various means for | ||||||
30 | protecting and enforcing racial and language minority voting | ||||||
31 | rights; and
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1 | WHEREAS, Although the struggle to ensure fairness in the | ||||||
2 | electoral process continues, as a result of the Voting Rights | ||||||
3 | Act racial and language minorities have enjoyed enhanced | ||||||
4 | opportunities to participate in the electoral process, cast | ||||||
5 | votes, and elect their candidates of choice; and
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6 | WHEREAS, In 2007, certain "special provisions" of the | ||||||
7 | Voting Rights Act that were enacted to address discriminatory | ||||||
8 | voting practices and the present effects of those practices | ||||||
9 | could expire if not renewed by Congress; and
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10 | WHEREAS, These provisions include:
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11 | Section 2: This provision equips voters with the means | ||||||
12 | to challenge election laws that result in a denial or | ||||||
13 | abridgement of voting rights on account of race, color, or | ||||||
14 | language minority status;
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15 | Section 4: The coverage provision, which determines | ||||||
16 | which states and jurisdictions must seek Section 5 | ||||||
17 | pre-clearance; the coverage formula reaches states and | ||||||
18 | jurisdictions with some of the most active histories of | ||||||
19 | discrimination;
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20 | Section 5: The federal pre-clearance of voting changes | ||||||
21 | provisions, which requires covered jurisdictions to prove that | ||||||
22 | voting changes are not discriminatory before they may legally | ||||||
23 | take effect;
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24 | Sections 6-9: The Federal Examiner/Observer | ||||||
25 | provisions, which set forth criteria for election monitoring by | ||||||
26 | the Department of Justice; and | ||||||
27 | Section 203: The bilingual voting materials | ||||||
28 | provisions, which mandate that certain voting materials must be | ||||||
29 | translated for language minorities in certain jurisdictions; | ||||||
30 | and
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31 | WHEREAS, By 2007, Congress will vote on whether to extend | ||||||
32 | these "special provisions" of the Voting Rights Act; the | ||||||
33 | effects of the long history of voting discrimination persist; |
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1 | the "special provisions" of the Voting Rights Act continue to | ||||||
2 | be extremely important tools for protecting minority voting; | ||||||
3 | during the reauthorization process, Congress will compile a | ||||||
4 | record that sets forth the continuing effects of the nation's | ||||||
5 | widespread voting discrimination; and
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6 | WHEREAS, During the reauthorization process, Congress and | ||||||
7 | individuals and organizations concerned with maintaining the | ||||||
8 | protections that the Voting Rights Act of 1965 provides will | ||||||
9 | have an opportunity to present the evidence necessary to | ||||||
10 | support renewal of the "special provisions" of the Voting | ||||||
11 | Rights Act of 1965; in the meantime, all eligible voters should | ||||||
12 | register, confirm their registration status, and exercise the | ||||||
13 | right to vote so that the long struggle to expand the franchise | ||||||
14 | yields meaningful results; therefore, be it
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15 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
16 | NINETY-FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
17 | we urge Congress to reauthorize the "special provisions" of the | ||||||
18 | Voting Rights Act of 1965; and be it further
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19 | RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the State of | ||||||
20 | Illinois will collaborate with the NAACP to ensure the | ||||||
21 | reauthorization of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
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