Voter Suppression Will Not Have the Last Word
Reverend Dr. Cassandra Gould examines voter suppression, the SAVE Act, and Black political resistance while calling for collective action to defend democracy.
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May 4, 2026
Reverend Dr. Cassandra Gould examines voter suppression, the SAVE Act, and Black political resistance while calling for collective action to defend democracy.
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By Reverend Dr. Cassandra Gould, national political director of the Faith in Action National Network.
Democracy aka governance by the people depends on full and equal civic participation. Free and fair elections are its foundation, ensuring that citizens choose their representatives, not the other way around. At its core, democracy rests on a simple but powerful principle: every vote carries equal weight, regardless of a person’s race, income, education, or social standing.
Yet, for Black Americans, that principle has always been contested.
From Reconstruction to Jim Crow to the present day, Black political participation has been met with coordinated resistance through law, policy, and violence. Yet, it has also been Black political action organizing, strategizing, marching, litigating, and voting that has repeatedly forced this nation closer to its democratic ideals.
That is why the Supreme Court’s April 29, 2026 ruling in Louisiana v. Callais must be understood for what it is: a decision that weakens protections against racial vote dilution and makes it easier to silence Black voters while claiming neutrality. It opens the door for politicians to choose their voters, reversing progress that was hard fought and hard won gains secured through decades of struggle and bloodshed.
At its core, democracy rests on a simple but powerful principle: every vote carries equal weight, regardless of a person’s race, income, education, or social standing.
This decision, coupled with the proposed SAVE Act, (Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act) represents a coordinated effort to contract the electorate.
The SAVE Act, under the guise of election security, would require in-person documentary proof of citizenship such as a passport or birth certificate to register or re-register to vote. In practice, it would dismantle modern voter registration systems, severely limiting online and mail-in registration. Millions of eligible voters would be impacted particularly Black communities, other communities of color, young people, low-income voters, naturalized citizens, married women with name changes, and elderly voters without ready access to documentation.
This is not about protecting democracy. It is about restricting it.
The implications are far-reaching:
These are not isolated policies; they are signals of what is coming. While “authoritarianism” may feel like new language, Black communities know this reality well. Legislative and judicial efforts to silence our voices are not new; they are part of history.
History also teaches us this: suppression has never had the final word. Black communities have resisted, organized, and expanded democracy even in the face of overwhelming opposition. That same spirit is required now.
For unions, educators, and people of faith, this moment is both political and moral. The same systems that undermine voting rights also weaken worker power, silence communities, and limit whose voices shape our collective future.
History also teaches us this: suppression has never had the final word.
This moment demands a renewed commitment to solidarity across race, class, faith, and geography, one powerful enough to meet the scale of the threat.
We know what’s coming: more barriers, more intimidation, more attempts to divide and discourage participation and sadly more violence: But we also know this: suppression has never had the final word.
Organized people have. This is not just about defending the democracy we thought we had. It is about building the democracy we need, one where everyone belongs.
So what must we do?
Democracy has always required struggle. The question before us now is whether we will meet this moment with the same courage, clarity, and collective power that brought us this far.
Republished with permission from the Albert Shanker Institute.
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