Why did voting rights become a powerful issue during the Obama presidency, and what were some actions taken to pursue reform?

Please provide the best answer for the statement.


Answer: An ideal response should:
a. Identify the Shelby County v. Holder decision as the point where voting rights became a renewed focus due to challenges to the 1965 Civil Rights Act.
b. Explain the rationale behind Shelby County v. Holder and the implication that civil rights legislation requiring oversight is outdated.
c. Describe the laws put in place at the state level that required voter identification for voting and the controversial impact these laws had based on race and economic status.
d. Connect the renewed struggle for voting rights with broader questions regarding the relationship between African Americans and government authority in the United States.

History

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The standard hypothesis that migrations from Asia to North America began around 13,000 BCE has been challenged by the discovery of what site?

A) Monte Verde B) Cahokia C) Teotihuacan D) Folsom

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What was President Martin Van Buren’s new solution to the problem of what to do about the federal government’s relationship to banking?

a. He created the Third Bank of the United States, but this time headed by a reliable Democrat. b. He proposed that federal funds be controlled by government officials rather than by bankers. c. He set up a program of federal insurance on individual bank accounts to protect them in times of panic. d. He called for federal money to be deposited in state-chartered banks known as “pets.” e. He proposed the creation of the Federal Reserve Bank, with branches in key cities.

History

Some of the worst urban violence in the 1900s occurred in the

a. 1965 riots that occurred in the black Watts area of Los Angeles. . b. 1968 urban riots in reaction to the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. c. summer riots of 1966 and 1967 in Cleveland, Detroit, Omaha, Newark, and several other cities. d. all of these e. none of these

History

How did the Deep South respond to court-ordered desegregation?

A) by taking action to end discrimination in schools B) with grudging acceptance of the decisions C) with apathy and passive acceptance D) with massive and widespread resistance E) with violence and threats to once again secede from the Union

History