they called it a dagger in the heart. when the u.s. supreme court threw out key sections of the voting rights act last month, democratic congressman john lewis said the decision, put a dagger in the heart of that law. for mr. lewis, the metaphor was one of outrage and lament because the voting rights act kept states with a history of discrimination in elections from carrying out changes without first getting approval from the federal government. the supreme court ruled against that protection was a huge loss for progressives like john lewis. conservatives who oppose the law reach the same conclusion about its fate that the court had put a dagger in its heart. though they tended to be happier about seeing that dagger there. you can fell by the way they responded to the news. mississippi announced it would be going forward with a voter i.d. law that had not been approved by the federal government. alabama announced it, too, would be rushing ahead to the voter i.d. law.
the heart. when the u.s. supreme court threw out key sections of the voting rights act last month, democratic congressman john lewis said the decision, put a dagger in the heart of that law. for mr. lewis, the metaphor was one of outrage and lament because the voting rights act kept states with a history of discrimination in elections from carrying out changes without first getting approval from the federal government. the supreme court ruled against that protection was a huge loss for progressives like john lewis. conservatives who oppose the law reach the same conclusion about its fate that the court had put a dagger in its heart. though they tended to be happier about seeing that dagger there. you can fell by the way they responded to the news. mississippi announced it would be going forward with a voter i.d. law that had not been approved by the federal government. alabama announced it, too, would be rushing ahead to the voter i.d. law. in texas, the attorney general announced hi
when the u.s. supreme court threw out key sections of the voting rights act last month, democratic congressman john lewis said the decision, put a dagger in the heart of that law. for mr. lewis, the metaphor was one of outrage and lament because the voting rights act kept states with a history of discrimination in elections from carrying out changes without first getting approval from the federal government. the supreme court ruled against that protection was a huge loss for progressives like john lewis. conservatives who oppose the law reach the same conclusion about its fate that the court had put a dagger in its heart. though they tended to be happier about seeing that dagger there. you can fell by the way they responded to the news. mississippi announced it would be going forward with a voter i.d. law that had not been approved by the federal government. alabama announced it, too, would be rushing ahead to the voter i.d. law. in texas, the attorney general announced his state wou