Resources
The following is our recommended list of Resources. Our list compiles select writings by leading academics, organizers, journalists, and litigators on topics relevant to the Right to Vote Initiative, including right-to-vote amendment language and the history of the right to vote and race. We also feature webinars and other up-to-date resources.
Americans don’t have a constitutional right to vote – it’s time for that to change Vox (Oct. 20, 2014, 2:00 P.M. EDT)
Writer Matthew Yglesias argues for the right-to-vote amendment:
Open Link“[A]n affirmative right to vote would give voting-rights proponents a positive vision to organize around, rather than simply playing defense against various ID measures.”
A call for a right-to-vote amendment on Constitution Day Reuters (Sept. 17, 2003)
Janai Nelson argues for a right-to-vote amendment:
Open Link“A right-to-vote amendment would open the door to voting access for excluded groups, such as the homeless, citizens convicted of a felony, and residents of the District of Columbia, among others. In addition, a constitutional amendment process centered on the right to vote would build civic awareness, inspiring a new vision of participatory democracy.”
Protecting Political Participation Through the Voter Qualifications Clause of Article I 56 B.C.L. Rev. 159 (2015)
Professor Franita Tolson argues for heightened judicial scrutiny of voting restrictions by states:
Open Link“[T]he Voter Qualifications Clause requires that states aggressively safeguard political participation in order to protect federal voting rights, which in turn requires courts to apply a higher level of scrutiny when assessing the constitutionality of state election laws.”
The Missing Right: A Constitutional Right to Vote Democracy: Journal of Ideas, Issue 28 (Spring 2013)
Jonathan Soros and Mark Schmitt argue for the right-to-vote amendment:
Open Link“In the era of the voting wars, the right to vote is itself a subject of continued partisan, regional, and racial conflict. It’s time to resolve the fights, and fulfill the promise of American democracy, by joining together in an effort to make the right to vote, at last, a part of our basic covenant as a nation.”
A Right-To-Vote Amendment to the Constitution: Confronting America’s Structural Democracy Deficit 3 Election L. J.: Rules, Politics, and Pol’y 559 (2004)
In this law review article, Professor Jamin Raskin presents the case for the right-to-vote amendment.
Open Link