KEY POINTS
  • The Voting Rights Act was ushered through Congress in 1965 in order to protect the right to vote for Black people and other minority groups.
  • As GOP lawmakers push to pass laws around the country that could make it harder for minority groups to vote, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in a major case over the landmark legislation that may help the new bills stand up against legal challenges.
  • In Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee, the justices will hear a 2016 case over voting rules in Arizona that poses questions at the heart of the current debate.
People wait in line to drop off mail-in ballots at an early voting location in Phoenix, Arizona on October 16, 2020.

The Voting Rights Act was ushered through Congress in 1965 in order to protect the right to vote for Black people and other minority groups who had been systematically excluded from the U.S. political system in the centuries beforehand.

On Tuesday, as Republican lawmakers push to pass laws around the country that could make it harder for minority groups to vote, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in a major case over the landmark 1960s legislation that may give the new bills a better shot at standing up against legal challenges.