At the founding of the United States, the right to vote belonged to a privileged few. White, male, property owners were the only people directly steering the fate of this nation. It took significant struggles to change that. The Civil War, women’s suffrage and the Civil Rights movement were just pieces of the complex web of events that gave most adult U.S. citizens the right to vote. But progress isn’t always linear. There have been significant efforts to suppress the voting population over the last two decades. Gerrymandering, restrictive voter ID laws, and purged voter rolls have all led to the disenfranchisement of many citizens. Carol Anderson is the author of, One Person, No Vote: How Voter Suppression is Destroying Our Democracy chronicles the history of voter suppression in the U.S. and the ways that modern politicians are trying to suppress the vote in states throughout the country. Wisconsin plays a starring role in the book. “There are a couple of ground zeros for this and Wisconsin, unfortunately, is one of them,” says Anderson.
She points to the efficacy of gerrymandering in Wisconsin. After the 2010 election, Republican politicians essentially sequestered themselves and redrew district lines to explicitly discriminate against Democratic voters. In the first election on the newly redrawn maps in 2012, Republicans won only 48.6 percent of the vote statewide, but won 60 out of 99 seats in the Wisconsin Assembly.
While racial gerrymandering is illegal in the U.S., political gerrymandering is still legal in most states. But Anderson says dividing the racial implications of suppressing Democratic votes is “an act of fiction.”
Full Article: ‘One Person, No Vote’ Highlights Impact Of Voter Suppression Laws | WUWM.