Protecting Your Voting Rights
NEA Booklet Encourages Americans to Vote
To commemorate the 40th anniversary of the 1965 Voting Rights Act and to encourage its members, their families, and the public to vote, the National Education Association (NEA) produced a booklet ( 31pp, 524KB) on voting, Protecting Your Voting Rights, and a list of Web resources—Voting Rights Resources.
The right to vote remains one of the most fundamental elements of democracy and Americans have both the right and the responsibility to vote for the issues they hold dear.
For the NEA, the main issue is providing great public schools for every child.
To maintain quality public schools, voter participation is critically important. Great public schools depend on public support and informed lawmakers elected by voters at the national, state, and local levels.
Voters have the primary responsibility to elect officials who will represent them well and then hold those officials accountable to make and enforce sound policies. In local communities, voters have a great say in the funding and education policies for their schools.
Since the Voting Rights Act became law in 1965, voter participation has increased. Congress has amended and extended the Act several times since its original passage, most recently in 2006, when it extended the Act for 25 years, including all of its original provisions. Here are some questions to test your knowledge of those provisions:
- May you receive bilingual voting assistance when you vote?
- May you seek federal examiners if you suspect racial discrimination in local electioneering?
- May you seek federal government preclearance before a proposed change in voting qualifications or procedures take effect where you live?
You will find the answers to these questions and more when you read the NEA's booklet Protecting Your Voting Rights. At the back of the publication, you will find online resources—with links to classroom materials for educators, voter registration tools for the public, and reports on voting rights and reform measures for policy makers. In a online companion piece to the booklet, you will find Voting Rights Resources with materials for educators: lesson plans, activities, current events, and quizzes and materials to promote voter registration and voting.
Today, more than ever, American citizens should be honored to have the right to vote. They should keep themselves informed to exercise that right. And they should diligently use it. Make your voice count. Register and vote.
Read Protecting Your Voting Rights ( 31 pp, 524KB).
See the Web resources Voting Rights Resources.
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