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Constitutional Law

University of Dayton

School of Law Faculty Publications

Series

2016

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Full-Text Articles in Law

In Defense Of Shelby County’S Principle Of Equal State Sovereignty, Jeffrey M. Schmitt Jan 2016

In Defense Of Shelby County’S Principle Of Equal State Sovereignty, Jeffrey M. Schmitt

School of Law Faculty Publications

In Shelby County v. Holder, the Supreme Court struck down a key aspect of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 based on “the principle that all States enjoy equal sovereignty.” Legal scholars have exhaustively attacked Shelby County’s equal sovereignty principle with a surprising degree of unanimity and contempt. These critics argue that the principle is theoretically unworkable, finds no support in the Supreme Court’s precedent, is inconsistent with constitutional history, undermines individual rights, and is tainted by its association with slavery and Jim Crow. This Article responds to such criticism by arguing that the principle of equal sovereignty is a …