Federalizing the Voting Rights Act

12 Pages Posted: 24 Aug 2021 Last revised: 9 Feb 2024

See all articles by Travis Crum

Travis Crum

Washington University in St. Louis--School of Law

Date Written: August 22, 2021

Abstract

In Presidential Control of Elections, Professor Lisa Marshall Manheim masterfully canvasses how “a president can affect the rules of elections that purport to hold him accountable” and thereby “undermine the democratic will and delegitimize the executive branch.” Bringing together insights from administrative law and election law, she categorizes how presidents exercise control over elections: priority setting through executive agencies, encouraging gridlock in independent agencies, and idiosyncratic exercise of their narrow grants of unilateral authority.

Manheim’s principal concern is an executive influencing elections to entrench themselves and their allies in power. Her prognosis for the future is steely-eyed, and she recognizes that presidential control over elections is likely to not only persist but to also expand in the coming years. Rather than fight against the inevitability of presidential control, she advocates a checks and balances solution that achieves “meaningful counterbalance by empowering entities outside the executive branch.” In short, Manheim channels Madison in arguing that “ambition” should “counteract ambition.”

In this Response, I agree with Manheim’s superb descriptive account of the problem and her powerful normative critique from an administrative law perspective. I therefore highlight Manheim’s contributions and expand on them in two ways.

First, I argue that Manheim has problematized a central premise of election law: the federal government is an ally in the fight to protect minority voting rights. Manheim examines the recent past, paying particular attention to the George W. Bush, Obama, and Trump Administrations. Although Manheim is the first to identify the worrying trend of presidential control of elections, it is an old phenomenon. By shining a spotlight on the problem of presidential control of elections today, Manheim encourages a reassessment of the more distant past, when the president was usually—but not always—a friend rather than foe of minority voting rights.

Second, I propose a solution to the emerging federal threat: amending Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act (“VRA”) to apply to the federal government. This statutory revision would give plaintiffs a powerful tool to combat racial discrimination in voting committed by the federal government. This solution would also avoid the administrative law proxy fights that arose during the Trump Administration, where plaintiffs challenged policies because of their discriminatory effect on minority voters but framed their arguments as violations of the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”).

Keywords: election law, voting rights, redistricting, gerrymandering, Reconstruction

Suggested Citation

Crum, Travis, Federalizing the Voting Rights Act (August 22, 2021). 74 Vanderbilt Law Review En Banc 323 (2021), Washington University in St. Louis Legal Studies Research Paper 21-08-02, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3909461

Travis Crum (Contact Author)

Washington University in St. Louis--School of Law ( email )

Campus Box 1120
St. Louis, MO 63130
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
143
Abstract Views
2,588
Rank
365,097
PlumX Metrics