L20. Political Representation in the US Flashcards

1
Q

Race and franchise in the US

A
  • central to the history of the franchise in the US
  • In Canada the central problem is national identity, in the US it is racial identity
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2
Q

Does the US use numeric or regional representation?

A
  • seen as numeric but current US policies regarding race and representation are rooted in regional representation
  • do regional representation is important to US race relations
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3
Q

History of the franchise in the US 1800-1965

A

1788: Constitution states the 3/5 clause
- free people are whole and all others (slaves)
1870: formal right to vote
- 15th amendment
- phrased as a negative vote (you cannot be denied)
1965: Voting rights march
- Start in Selma, on March 7th (this attempt was when state troopers committed mass violence “bloody sunday”)
- galvanized white support for voting rights
- by August 6th voting rights act is passed and signed

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4
Q

How where black people disenfranchised?

A
  • to vote in the US, you needed to be registered to vote (no federal system doing it)
  • typically done on the county level
  • tests were commonly administered (literacy test that were very subjective, ‘character tests’ which were beyond subjective but highly discriminatory and continue to disenfranchise felons)
  • poll tax (needed to pay a fee to register to vote, disenfranchised all poor people, and for wealthier black people they were made impossible to pay)
  • “white-only” political parties: limited the ability of black people to run for office
  • intimidation and violence (huge issue, remember movie clips)
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5
Q

1965 Voting Rights act

A
  • first time federal government had put together a large legislative for voting rights (pro-active)
  • beginning to re-statement of the 15th amendment so it will be impossible for courts to shut down (in legislative form) (specifically administered to certain states and counties)

Section 3, 6-8
- removes local control
- puts federal office in charge of administering voters
Section 4
- bans tests and devices that limit the eligibility to vote
- congress could not say they were going to specifically applied to certain places

Sections above overturned in 2013
- only section 2 remains in effect
- in 1975 language is included as protected

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6
Q

Was the voting rights act effective?

A

hugely!
- gap in registration between blacks and white between 1965 to 1985 went from 40% to 5%
- overall white voting decreased because many whites were registered more than once
- federalization made things more standardized and data became more accurate

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7
Q

Where does the battleground move after the voting rights act was passed?

A
  • the electoral system and districting
  • gerrymandering becomes a real problem
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