This book contained *a lot* of information, combining historical policies/legislation, court decisions, and modern day analyses of events connected to voter suppression and disenfranchisement. I logged it under “things that scare me” for Book Bingo because the collapse of democracy scares the shit out of me!
The book is divided up into five sections: history of voter disenfranchisement, voter IDs, Voter Roll Purge, state Rigging of Rules, and then the Resistance. Throughout the book, it becomes clear how so much of our modern political landscape is dependent on keeping minorities from voting. (I hate to point political fingers because #NotAllConservatives of whatever, but the truth is, Republican leaders are pretty open about the fact that they are a numerical minority in this country, so if they want to remain influential in government, they have to either 1) change their platform to appeal to more Americans or 2) change the rules to stop their competition from winning. So as opposed to moving with the cultural shifts of value, they just seem to stick with making it more difficult for people who tend to lean Democrat to vote)
I appreciated ending with the case study of Alabama—how the collaboration of several different organizations, many led by people from Alabama, were able to support historically disenfranchised people registering/voting early/getting to the polls day of in order to stop a corrupt man (who had been favorited to win) from entering the Senate. By focusing on how the most successful social movements happen when they come from the people involved, it both provided hope for other states without claiming to be a one size fits all blueprint.
I am very grateful to live in a state that values making voting accessible and am proud of our above average voter turnout rates. But when we compare even the best states to the voter turnout rates in other developed countries, it becomes very clear how much work there is to do. (A shocking revelation from this book was that, not only is the US as a whole categorized as a “flawed democracy”, if you analyzed individual states on that same scale, some of them land between Venezuela and Iran.)
Anyway, if you want to get angry about how many different examples there are of governments on every scale working to exclude they very people they are meant to be serving, or more likely, if you’d like to have better data to back up your arguments with your conservative family members who for some reason still think voter fraud is a concern in this country, give One Person, No Vote a read.