Do you know where your birth certificate is? Journalist warns of new voting barriers
NPR – Politics
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Summary
A Fulton County, Ga. staff member works as people vote in a runoff election in Atlanta on June 16, 2026. In its spring session, the Supreme Court significantly narrowed the Voting Rights Act. On the historical bipartisan support of the Voting Rights Act The Voting Rights Act was passed by overwhelming support by the Congress in 1965. The Voting Rights Act was reauthorized four times by the Congress, each time with overwhelming bipartisan support. Each reauthorization of the law was signed by a Republican president — and what changed was the Supreme Court. This wasn't the first decision by the Supreme Court, by the Roberts Court, that deregulated the campaign finance system in such a way that gives wealthy individuals far more power. ... On growing support for Supreme Court reform I've been talking to a lot of voting rights experts in the past months and asking them, could Congress pass a new Voting Rights Act? Could Congress pass on a ban on partisan gerrymandering? And basically, everyone tells me they could do it, but the Supreme Court is just going to strike it down, which is why the issue of Supreme Court reform is gaining momentum in Democratic circles, whether it's term limits, whether it is expanding the Court, whether it's doing something to rein in a Court that feels unchecked by democracy, by the normal democratic norms. Monique Nazareth and Thea Chaloner produced and edited this interview for broadcast.
From the source
The rules of the midterms are being rewritten, from redistricting to campaign money. Mother Jones journalist Ari Berman explains why President Trump seems "obsessed with the mechanics of voting." (Image credit: Mike Stewart)
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