Stanford Legal

Who Gets to Vote?


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Sophia Lin Lakin, JD ’11 (MS ’04, BA ’02), director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project, challenges the stated premises behind many current voting restrictions, including claims about widespread non-citizen voting. “If we’re worried about the integrity of our elections,” she tells Stanford Law professor and host Pam Karlan, “we should be worried about making sure that more people are participating in our elections and not chasing a fantasy.”

That concern—how long-standing efforts to restrict voting access can make it harder for eligible voters to participate—runs through the episode, which was recorded shortly before the Supreme Court handed down its decision in Louisiana v. Callais. In a 6–3 ruling, the Court struck down Louisiana’s congressional map, which had created a second majority-Black district, holding that the map was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. The decision could make it harder to use Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act to challenge maps that dilute minority voting strength.

Lakin and Karlan discuss what is at stake when access to the ballot becomes harder and the rules for translating votes into political power begin to shift. Their conversation focuses on proof-of-citizenship requirements, mail ballots, voter roll purges, and redistricting battles, offering a timely look at the legal fights shaping who can vote, whose ballots count, and whether communities can elect representatives of their choice.

 

Links:

  • Sophia Lin Lakin >>> ACLU page
  • Connect:

    • Episode Transcripts >>> Stanford Legal Podcast Website
    • Stanford Legal Podcast >>> LinkedIn Page
    • Rich Ford >>>  Twitter/X
    • Pam Karlan >>> Stanford Law School Page
    • Stanford Law School >>> Twitter/X
    • Stanford Lawyer Magazine >>> Twitter/X
    • (00:00:00) The Three Buckets of Voting Rights 

      (00:02:35) Voter Roll Surveillance 

      (00:06:17) The Non-Citizen Voting Myth and the Dangers of Faulty Databases 

      (00:10:23) Citizenship Documentation Requirements 

      (00:16:19) Mail Voting Rules and the Materiality Provision 

      (00:21:00) Section Two of the Voting Rights Act and Redistricting Battles 

      (00:28:51) Race, Politics, and the Future of Fair Maps 


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