* Together with No. 44, Orig., Texas v. Mitchell,
Attorney General, No. 46, Orig., United States v. Arizona, and
No. 47, Orig., United States v. Idaho, also on bills of complaint.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, announcing the judgments of the Court in an opinion expressing his own view of the cases.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, MR. JUSTICE WHITE, and MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL dissent from the judgments insofar as they declare § 302 unconstitutional as applied to state and local elections, and concur in the judgments in all other respects
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN join, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
These original actions involve the constitutionality
of three provisions of the Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1970
which (1) lower the minimum age of voters in both state and federal
elections from 21 to 18, (2) bar the use of literacy tests (and
similar voting eligibility requirements) for a five-year period
in state and federal elections in any area where such tests are
not already proscribed by the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and (3)
forbid States from disqualifying voters in presidential and vice-presidential
elections for failure to meet state residency requirements and
provide uniform national rules for absentee voting in such elections.
Held: (1) The 18-year-old minimum-age requirement of the Voting
Rights Act Amendments is valid for national elections. (2) That
requirement is not valid for state and local elections. (3) The
literacy test provision is valid. (4) The residency and absentee
balloting provisions are valid. Pp. 117-296.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK concluded that:
1. Congress has the authority to permit 18-year-old
citizens to vote in national elections, under Art. I, § 4,
Art. II, § 1, and the Necessary and Proper Clause, of the
Constitution since those provisions fully empower Congress to
make or alter regulations in national elections, to supervise
such elections, and to set the qualifications for voters therein.
Pp. 117, 119-124.
2. But under Art I, § 2, the States have
the power to set qualifications to vote in state and local elections,
and the whole Constitution reserves that power to the States except
as it has been curtailed by specific constitutional amendments.
No amendment (including the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment and the other Civil War Amendments) authorizes Congress'
attempt to lower the voting age in state and local elections.
Pp. 118, 124-131.
3. The literacy test ban is constitutional
under the Enforcement Clauses of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Amendments, in view of the evidence of racial discrimination that
Congress found in various parts of the Nation: racial discrimination
resulting from literacy tests, the educational inequality stemming
from the "separate but equal" rule, and other racially
discriminatory practices. Pp. 118, 131-134.
4. The provisions forbidding States from disqualifying
voters in national elections for presidential and vice-presidential
electors because they have not met state residency requirements
and establishing absentee balloting rules are valid under Congress'
broad powers to regulate federal elections and maintain a national
government.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS concluded that:
1. The authority of Congress to fix at 18 the
minimum age for the civil right of voting in national elections
derives from the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
and the power to "enforce" granted by § 5 of that
Amendment. Congress had an adequate basis for concluding that
18-year-olds are mature enough to vote and that to deprive them
of the franchise would be a denial of equal protection. Pp. 135-144.
3. The bar against a State's denying the right
to vote in any federal, state, or local election because of a
literacy test is sustainable as appropriate legislation to enforce
the Equal Protection Clause, Congress having concluded that such
tests have been used to discriminate against the voting rights
of minority groups and that the tests are not necessary to ensure
that voters be well informed. Pp. 144-147.
4. The right to vote in national elections
is a privilege and immunity of national citizenship and the congressional
judgment to ban durational residency requirements in presidential
and vice-presidential elections is a manifestly permissible means
of enforcing that privilege and immunity under § 5 of the
Fourteenth Amendment. Pp. 147-150.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN concluded that:
2. The Fourteenth Amendment was not intended
to restrict the authority of the States to allocate their political
power as they see fit and neither that Amendment nor any other
provision of the Constitution authorizes Congress to set voter
qualifications in state or local elections. Pp. 154-213.
3. The literacy requirement can be deemed an
appropriate means of enforcing the Fifteenth Amendment since Congress
could have determined that racial prejudice is prevalent throughout
the Nation and that literacy tests unduly lend themselves to discriminatory
application. Pp. 216-217.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, MR. JUSTICE WHITE, and
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL concluded that:
1. Congress has the power to forbid the disenfranchisement
in national elections of persons over the age of 18 because of
their age, in order to enforce the Equal Protection Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment. There was ample evidence to support
Congress' conclusion that the exclusion of citizens 18 to 21 years
of age from the franchise is unnecessary to promote any legitimate
interest the States may have in assuring intelligent and responsible
voting. Pp. 239-281.
3. The congressional determination that a nationwide
ban on literacy tests was necessary to prevent racial discrimination
in voting is amply supported by the legislative record, and the
proscription of literacy tests is well within the power of Congress
granted by § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment. Pp. 231-236.
4. There is adequate constitutional basis for
the residency provisions of the Act in § 5 of the Fourteenth
Amendment, as there is ample justification for the congressional
findings that durational residence requirements abridge the right
of free interstate migration and that such requirements are not
reasonably related to any compelling state interests. Pp. 236-239.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, joined by THE CHIEF JUSTICE
and MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concluded that:
2. Congress has no power to confer the right
to vote in state or local elections on citizens from the ages
of 18 to 21 since under the Constitution only the States have
the power to set voting qualifications. Pp. 293-296.
3. The literacy test ban is constitutional
under the Enforcement Clause of the Fifteenth Amendment. Pp. 282-284.
4. The residency provisions of the Act are
constitutional because Congress, while it does not have general
authority to establish qualifications for voting in congressional
or presidential elections, does have the power under the Necessary
and Proper Clause to protect the privileges of United States citizenship,
including the freedom to travel and to change one's residence.
Pp. 285-292.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, announcing the judgments
of the Court in an opinion expressing his own
view of the cases.
In these suits certain States resist compliance
with the Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1970, Pub. L. 91-285,
84 Stat. 314, because they believe that the Act takes away from
them powers reserved to the States by the Constitution to control
their own elections. 1 By its
terms the Act does three things. First: It lowers the minimum
age of voters in both state and federal elections from 21 to 18.
Second: Based upon a finding by Congress that literacy tests have
been used to discriminate against voters on account of their color,
the Act enforces the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments by barring
the use of such tests in all elections, state and national, for
a five-year period. Third: The Act forbids States from disqualifying
voters in national elections for presidential and vice-presidential
electors because they have not met state residency requirements.
For the reasons set out in Part I of this opinion,
I believe Congress can fix the age of voters in national elections,
such as congressional, senatorial, vice-presidential and presidential
elections, but cannot set the voting age in state and local elections.
For reasons expressed in separate opinions, my Brothers DOUGLAS,
BRENNAN, WHITE, and MARSHALL join me in concluding that Congress
can enfranchise 18-year-old citizens in national elections, but
dissent from the judgment that Congress cannot extend the franchise
to 18-year-old citizens in state and local elections. For reasons
expressed in separate opinions, my Brothers THE CHIEF JUSTICE,
HARLAN, STEWART, and BLACKMUN join me in concluding that Congress
cannot interfere with the age for voters set by the States for
state and local elections. They, however, dissent from the judgment
that Congress can control voter qualifications in federal elections.
In summary, it is the judgment of the Court that the 18-year-old
vote provisions of the Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1970 are
constitutional and enforceable insofar as they pertain to federal
elections and unconstitutional and unenforceable insofar as they
pertain to state and local elections.
For the reasons set out in Part II of this
opinion, I believe that Congress, in the exercise of its power
to enforce the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, can prohibit
the use of literacy tests or other devices used to discriminate
against voters on account of their race in both state and federal
elections. For reasons expressed in separate opinions, all of
my Brethren join me in this judgment. Therefore the literacy-test
provisions of the Act are upheld.
For the reasons set out in Part III of this
opinion, I believe Congress can set residency requirements and
provide for absentee balloting in elections for presidential and
vice-presidential electors. For reasons expressed in separate
opinions, my Brothers THE CHIEF JUSTICE, DOUGLAS, BRENNAN, STEWART,
WHITE, MARSHALL, and BLACKMUN concur in this judgment. My Brother
HARLAN, for the reasons stated in his separate opinion, considers
that the residency provisions of the statute are unconstitutional.
Therefore the residency and absentee balloting provisions of the
Act are upheld.
Let judgments be entered accordingly.
I
The Framers of our Constitution provided in
Art. I, § 2, that members of the House of Representatives
should be elected by the people and that the voters for Representatives
should have "the Qualifications requisite for Electors of
the most numerous Branch of the State Legislature." Senators
were originally to be elected by the state legislatures, but under
the Seventeenth Amendment Senators are also elected by the people,
and voters for Senators have the same qualifications as voters
for Representatives. In the very beginning the responsibility
of the States for setting the qualifications of voters in congressional
elections was made subject to the power of Congress to make or
alter such regulations if it deemed it advisable to do so. 2
This was done in Art. I, § 4, of the Constitution which provides:
"The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such Regulations, except as to the Places of chusing Senators." (Emphasis supplied.)
Moreover, the power of Congress to make election
regulations in national elections is augmented by the Necessary
and Proper Clause. See McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316 (1819).
In United States v. Classic, 313 U.S. 299 (1941), where the Court
upheld congressional power to regulate party primaries, Mr. Justice
Stone speaking for the Court construed the interrelation of these
clauses of the Constitution, stating:
"While, in a loose sense, the right to vote for representatives in Congress is sometimes spoken of as a right derived from the states . . . this statement is true only in the sense that the states are authorized by the Constitution, to legislate on the subject as provided by § 2 of Art. I, to the extent that Congress has not restricted state action by the exercise of its powers to regulate elections under § 4 and its more general power under Article I, § 8, clause 18 of the Constitution 'to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers.'" 313 U.S., at 315.
See also Ex parte Siebold, 100 U.S. 371 (1880);
Ex parte Yarbrough, 110 U.S. 651 (1884); Swafford v. Templeton,
185 U.S. 487 (1902); Wiley v. Sinkler, 179 U.S. 58 (1900).
The breadth of power granted to Congress to
make or alter election regulations in national elections, including
the qualifications of voters, is demonstrated by the fact that
the Framers of the Constitution and the state legislatures which
ratified it intended to grant to Congress the power to lay out
or alter the boundaries of the congressional districts. In the
ratifying conventions speakers "argued that the power given
Congress in Art. I, § 4, was meant to be used to vindicate
the people's right to equality of representation in the House,"
Wesberry v. Sanders, 376 U.S. 1, 16 (1964), and that Congress
would "'most probably . . . lay the state off into districts.'"
And in Colegrove v. Green, 328 U.S. 549 (1946), no Justice of
this Court doubted Congress' power to rearrange the congressional
districts according to population; the fight in that case revolved
about the judicial power to compel redistricting.
Surely no voter qualification was more important
to the Framers than the geographical qualification embodied in
the concept of congressional districts. The Framers expected Congress
to use this power to eradicate "rotten boroughs," 3
and Congress has in fact used its power to prevent States from
electing all Congressmen at large. 4
There can be no doubt that the power to alter congressional district
lines is vastly more significant in its effect than the power
to permit 18-year-old citizens to go to the polls and vote in
all federal elections.
Any doubt about the powers of Congress to regulate
congressional elections, including the age and other qualifications
of the voters, should be dispelled by the opinion of this Court
in Smiley v. Holm, 285 U.S. 355 (1932). There, Chief Justice Hughes
writing for a unanimous Court discussed the scope of congressional
power under § 4 at some length. He said:
"The subject matter is the 'times, places and manner of holding elections for Senators and Representatives.' It cannot be doubted that these comprehensive words embrace authority to provide a complete code for congressional elections, not only as to times and places, but in relation to notices, registration, supervision of voting, protection of voters, prevention of fraud and corrupt practices, counting of votes, duties of inspectors and canvassers, and making and publication of election returns; in short, to enact the numerous requirements as to procedure and safeguards which experience shows are necessary in order to enforce the fundamental right involved. . . .
"This view is confirmed by the second clause of Article I, section 4, which provides that 'the Congress may at any time by law make or alter such regulations,' with the single exception stated. The phrase 'such regulations' plainly refers to regulations of the same general character that the legislature of the State is authorized to prescribe with respect to congressional elections. In exercising this power, the Congress may supplement these state regulations or may substitute its own. . . . It 'has a general supervisory power over the whole subject.'" Id., at 366-367.
In short, the Constitution allotted to the
States the power to make laws regarding national elections, but
provided that if Congress became dissatisfied with the state laws,
Congress could alter them. 5
A newly created national government could hardly have been expected
to survive without the ultimate power to rule itself and to fill
its offices under its own laws. The Voting Rights Act Amendments
of 1970 now before this Court evidence dissatisfaction of Congress
with the voting age set by many of the States for national elections.
I would hold, as have a long line of decisions in this Court,
that Congress has ultimate supervisory power over congressional
elections. 6 Similarly, it
is the prerogative of Congress to oversee the conduct of presidential
and vice-presidential elections and to set the qualifications
for voters for electors for those offices. It cannot be seriously
contended that Congress has less power over the conduct of presidential
elections than it has over congressional elections. 7
On the other hand, the Constitution was also
intended to preserve to the States the power that even the Colonies
had to establish and maintain their own separate and independent
governments, except insofar as the Constitution itself commands
otherwise. My Brother HARLAN has persuasively demonstrated that
the Framers of the Constitution intended the States to keep for
themselves, as provided in the Tenth Amendment, 8
the power to regulate elections. My major disagreement with my
Brother HARLAN is that, while I agree as to the States' power
to regulate the elections of their own officials, I believe, contrary
to his view, that Congress has the final authority over federal
elections. No function is more essential to the separate and independent
existence of the States and their governments than the power to
determine within the limits of the Constitution the qualifications
of their own voters for state, county, and municipal offices and
the nature of their own machinery for filling local public offices.
Pope v. Williams, 193 U.S. 621 (1904); Minor v. Happersett, 21
Wall. 162 (1875). Moreover, Art. I, § 2, 9
is a clear indication that the Framers intended the States to
determine the qualifications of their own voters for state offices,
because those qualifications were adopted for federal offices
unless Congress directs otherwise under Art. I, § 4. It is
a plain fact of history that the Framers never imagined that the
national Congress would set the qualifications for voters in every
election from President to local constable or village alderman.
It is obvious that the whole Constitution reserves to the States
the power to set voter qualifications in state and local elections,
except to the limited extent that the people through constitutional
amendments have specifically narrowed the powers of the States.
Amendments Fourteen, Fifteen, Nineteen, and Twenty-four, each
of which has assumed that the States had general supervisory power
over state elections, are examples of express limitations on the
power of the States to govern themselves. And the Equal Protection
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment was never intended to destroy
the States' power to govern themselves, making the Nineteenth
and Twenty-fourth Amendments superfluous. My Brother BRENNAN's
opinion, if carried to its logical conclusion, would, under the
guise of insuring equal protection, blot out all state power,
leaving the 50 States as little more than impotent figureheads.
In interpreting what the Fourteenth Amendment means, the Equal
Protection Clause should not be stretched to nullify the States'
powers over elections which they had before the Constitution was
adopted and which they have retained throughout our history.
Of course, the original design of the Founding
Fathers was altered by the Civil War Amendments and various other
amendments to the Constitution. The Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth,
and Nineteenth Amendments have expressly authorized Congress to
"enforce" the limited prohibitions of those amendments
by "appropriate legislation." The Solicitor General
contends in these cases that Congress can set the age qualifications
for voters in state elections under its power to enforce the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Above all else, the framers of the Civil War
Amendments intended to deny to the States the power to discriminate
against persons on account of their race. Loving v. Virginia,
388 U.S. 1 (1967); Gomillion v. Lightfoot, 364 U.S. 339 (1960);
Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483 (1954); Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36, 71-72 (1873). While this Court has recognized
that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment in
some instances protects against discriminations other than those
on account of race, 10 see
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533 (1964); Hadley v. Junior College
District, 397 U.S. 50 (1970); see also Kotch v. Board of River
Port Pilots, 330 U.S. 552 (1947), and cases cited therein, it
cannot be successfully argued that the Fourteenth Amendment was
intended to strip the States of their power, carefully preserved
in the original Constitution, to govern themselves. The Fourteenth
Amendment was surely not intended to make every discrimination
between groups of people a constitutional denial of equal protection.
Nor was the Enforcement Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment intended
to permit Congress to prohibit every discrimination between groups
of people. On the other hand, the Civil War Amendments were unquestionably
designed to condemn and forbid every distinction, however trifling,
on account of race.
To fulfill their goal of ending racial discrimination
and to prevent direct or indirect state legislative encroachment
on the rights guaranteed by the amendments, the Framers gave Congress
power to enforce each of the Civil War Amendments. These enforcement
powers are broad. In Jones v. Alfred H. Mayer Co., 392 U.S. 409,
439 (1968), the Court held that § 2 of the Thirteenth Amendment
"clothed 'Congress with power to pass all laws necessary
and proper for abolishing all badges and incidents of slavery
in the United States.'" In construing § 5 of the Fourteenth
Amendment, the Court has stated:
"It is not said the judicial power of the general government shall extend to enforcing the prohibitions and to protecting the rights and immunities guaranteed. It is not said that branch of the government shall be authorized to declare void any action of a State in violation of the prohibitions. It is the power of Congress which has been enlarged." Ex parte Virginia, 100 U.S. 339, 345 (1880). (Emphasis added in part.)
And in South Carolina v. Katzenbach, 383 U.S.
301 (1966) (BLACK, J., dissenting on other grounds), the Court
upheld the literacy test ban of the Voting Rights Act of 1965,
79 Stat. 437, under Congress' Fifteenth Amendment enforcement
power.
As broad as the congressional enforcement power
is, it is not unlimited. Specifically, there are at least three
limitations upon Congress' power to enforce the guarantees of
the Civil War Amendments. First, Congress may not by legislation
repeal other provisions of the Constitution. Second, the power
granted to Congress was not intended to strip the States of their
power to govern themselves or to convert our national government
of enumerated powers into a central government of unrestrained
authority over every inch of the whole Nation. Third, Congress
may only "enforce" the provisions of the amendments
and may do so only by "appropriate legislation." Congress
has no power under the enforcement sections to undercut the amendments'
guarantees of personal equality and freedom from discrimination,
see Katzenbach v. Morgan, 384 U.S. 641, 651 n. 10 (1966), or to
undermine those protections of the Bill of Rights which we have
held the Fourteenth Amendment made applicable to the States. 11
Of course, we have upheld congressional legislation
under the Enforcement Clauses in some cases where Congress has
interfered with state regulation of the local electoral process.
In Katzenbach v. Morgan, supra, the Court upheld a statute which
outlawed New York's requirement of literacy in English as a prerequisite
to voting as this requirement was applied to Puerto Ricans with
certain educational qualifications. The New York statute overridden
by Congress applied to all elections. And in South Carolina v.
Katzenbach, supra (BLACK, J., dissenting on other grounds), the
Court upheld the literacy test ban of the Voting Rights Act of
1965. That Act proscribed the use of the literacy test in all
elections in certain areas. But division of power between state
and national governments, like every provision of the Constitution,
was expressly qualified by the Civil War Amendments' ban on racial
discrimination. Where Congress attempts to remedy racial discrimination
under its enforcement powers, its authority is enhanced by the
avowed intention of the framers of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth,
and Fifteenth Amendments. Cf. Harper v. Virginia Board of Elections,
383 U.S. 663, 670 (1966) (BLACK, J., dissenting).
In enacting the 18-year-old vote provisions
of the Act now before the Court, Congress made no legislative
findings that the 21-year-old vote requirement was used by the
States to disenfranchise voters on account of race. I seriously
doubt that such a finding, if made, could be supported by substantial
evidence. Since Congress has attempted to invade an area preserved
to the States by the Constitution without a foundation for enforcing
the Civil War Amendments' ban on racial discrimination, I would
hold that Congress has exceeded its powers in attempting to lower
the voting age in state and local elections. On the other hand,
where Congress legislates in a domain not exclusively reserved
by the Constitution to the States, its enforcement power need
not be tied so closely to the goal of eliminating discrimination
on account of race.
To invalidate part of the Voting Rights Act
Amendments of 1970, however, does not mean that the entire Act
must fall or that the constitutional part of the 18-year-old vote
provision cannot be given effect. In passing the Voting Rights
Act Amendments of 1970, Congress recognized that the limits of
its power under the Enforcement Clauses were largely undetermined,
and therefore included a broad severability provision:
"If any provision of this Act or the application of any provision thereof to any person or circumstance is judicially determined to be invalid, the remainder of this Act or the application of such provision to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected by such determination." 84 Stat. 318.
In this case, it is the judgment of the Court
that Title III, lowering the voting age to 18, is invalid as applied
to voters in state and local elections. It is also the judgment
of the Court that Title III is valid with respect to national
elections. We would fail to follow the express will of Congress
in interpreting its own statute if we refused to sever these two
distinct aspects of Title III. Moreover, it is a longstanding
canon of statutory construction that legislative enactments are
to be enforced to the extent that they are not inconsistent with
the Constitution, particularly where the valid portion of the
statute does not depend upon the invalid part. See, e. g., Watson
v. Buck, 313 U.S. 387 (1941); Marsh v. Buck, 313 U.S. 406 (1941).
Here, of course, the enforcement of the 18-year-old vote in national
elections is in no way dependent upon its enforcement in state
and local elections.
II
In Title I of the Voting Rights Act Amendments
of 1970 Congress extended the provisions of the Voting Rights
Act of 1965 which ban the use of literacy tests in certain States
upon the finding of certain conditions by the United States Attorney
General. The Court upheld the provisions of the 1965 Act over
my partial dissent in South Carolina v. Katzenbach, supra, and
Gaston County v. United States, 395 U.S. 285 (1969). The constitutionality
of Title I is not raised by any of the parties to these suits.
12
In Title II of the Amendments Congress prohibited
until August 6, 1975, the use of any test or device resembling
a literacy test in any national, state, or local election in any
area of the United States where such test is not already proscribed
by the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The State of Arizona maintains
that Title II cannot be enforced to the extent that it is inconsistent
with Arizona's literacy test requirement, Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann.
§§ 16-101.A.4, 16-101.A.5 (1956). I would hold that
the literacy test ban of the 1970 Amendments is constitutional
under the Enforcement Clause of the Fifteenth Amendment and that
it supersedes Arizona's conflicting statutes under the Supremacy
Clause of the Federal Constitution.
In enacting the literacy test ban of Title
II Congress had before it a long history of the discriminatory
use of literacy tests to disfranchise voters on account of their
race. Congress could have found that as late as the summer of
1968, the percentage registration of nonwhite voters in seven
Southern States was substantially below the percentage registration
of white voters. 13 Moreover,
Congress had before it striking evidence to show that the provisions
of the 1965 Act had had in the span of four years a remarkable
impact on minority group voter registration. 14
Congress also had evidence to show that voter registration in
areas with large Spanish-American populations was consistently
below the state and national averages. In Arizona, for example,
only two counties out of eight with Spanish surname populations
in excess of 15% showed a voter registration equal to the state-wide
average. 15 Arizona also
has a serious problem of deficient voter registration among Indians.
Congressional concern over the use of a literacy test to disfranchise
Puerto Ricans in New York State is already a matter of record
in this Court. Katzenbach v. Morgan, supra. And as to the Nation
as a whole, Congress had before it statistics which demonstrate
that voter registration and voter participation are consistently
greater in States without literacy tests. 16
Congress also had before it this country's
history of discriminatory educational opportunities in both the
North and the South. The children who were denied an equivalent
education by the "separate but equal" rule of Plessy
v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896), overruled in Brown v. Board
of Education, 347 U.S. 483 (1954), are now old enough to vote.
There is substantial, if not overwhelming, evidence from which
Congress could have concluded that it is a denial of equal protection
to condition the political participation of children educated
in a dual school system upon their educational achievement. Moreover,
the history of this legislation suggests that concern with educational
inequality was perhaps uppermost in the minds of the congressmen
who sponsored the Act. The hearings are filled with references
to educational inequality. Faced with this and other evidence
that literacy tests reduce voter participation in a discriminatory
manner not only in the South but throughout the Nation, Congress
was supported by substantial evidence in concluding that a nationwide
ban on literacy tests was appropriate to enforce the Civil War
amendments.
Finally, there is yet another reason for upholding
the literacy test provisions of this Act. In imposing a nationwide
ban on literacy tests, Congress has recognized a national problem
for what it is -- a serious national dilemma that touches every
corner of our land. In this legislation Congress has recognized
that discrimination on account of color and racial origin is not
confined to the South, but exists in various parts of the country.
Congress has decided that the way to solve the problems of racial
discrimination is to deal with nationwide discrimination with
nationwide legislation. Compare South Carolina v. Katzenbach,
supra, and Gaston County v. United States, supra.
III
In Title II of the Voting Rights Act Amendments
Congress also provided that in presidential and vice-presidential
elections, no voter could be denied his right to cast a ballot
because he had not lived in the jurisdiction long enough to meet
its residency requirements. Furthermore, Congress provided uniform
national rules for absentee voting in presidential and vice-presidential
elections. In enacting these regulations Congress was attempting
to insure a fully effective voice to all citizens in national
elections. What I said in Part I of this opinion applies with
equal force here. Acting under its broad authority to create and
maintain a national government, Congress unquestionably has power
under the Constitution to regulate federal elections. The Framers
of our Constitution were vitally concerned with setting up a national
government that could survive. Essential to the survival and to
the growth of our national government is its power to fill its
elective offices and to insure that the officials who fill those
offices are as responsive as possible to the will of the people
whom they represent.
IV
Our judgments today give the Federal Government
the power the Framers conferred upon it, that is, the final control
of the elections of its own officers. Our judgments also save
for the States the power to control state and local elections
which the Constitution originally reserved to them and which no
subsequent amendment has taken from them. 17
The generalities of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment were not designed or adopted to render the States impotent
to set voter qualifications in elections for their own local officials
and agents in the absence of some specific constitutional limitations.
---- Begin EndNotes ----
1 In Nos.
43, Orig., and 44, Orig., Oregon and Texas, respectively, invoke
the original jurisdiction of this Court to sue the United States
Attorney General seeking an injunction against the enforcement
of Title III (18-year-old vote) of the Act. In No. 46, Orig.,
the United States invokes our original jurisdiction seeking to
enjoin Arizona from enforcing its laws to the extent that they
conflict with the Act, and directing the officials of Arizona
to comply with the provisions of Title II (nationwide literacy
test ban), § 201, 84 Stat. 315, and Title III (18-year-old
vote), §§ 301, 302, 84 Stat. 318, of the Act. In No.
47, Orig., the United States invokes our original jurisdiction
seeking to enjoin Idaho from enforcing its laws to the extent
that they conflict with Title II (abolition of residency requirements
in presidential and vice-presidential elections), § 202,
84 Stat. 316, and Title III (18-year-old vote) of the Act. No
question has been raised concerning the standing of the parties
or the jurisdiction of this Court.
2 Article
I, § 4, was a compromise between those delegates to the Constitutional
Convention who wanted the States to have final authority over
the election of all state and federal officers and those who wanted
Congress to make laws governing national elections, 2 J. Story,
Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States 280-292
(1st ed. 1833). The contemporary interpretation of this compromise
reveals that those who favored national authority over national
elections prevailed. Six States included in their resolutions
of ratification the recommendation that a constitutional amendment
be adopted to curtail the power of the Federal Government to regulate
national elections. Such an amendment was never adopted.
A majority of the delegates to the Massachusetts
ratifying convention must have assumed that Art. I, § 4,
gave very broad powers to Congress. Otherwise that convention
would not have recommended an amendment providing:
"That Congress do not exercise the powers
vested in them by the 4th section of the 1st article, but in cases
where a state shall neglect or refuse to make the regulations
therein mentioned, or shall make regulations subversive of the
rights of the people to a free and equal representation in Congress,
agreeably to the Constitution." 2 J. Elliot's Debates on
the Federal Constitution 177 (1876).
The speech of Mr. Cabot, one delegate to the
Massachusetts convention, who argued that Art. I, § 4, was
"to be as highly prized as any in the Constitution,"
expressed a view of the breadth of that section which must have
been shared by most of his colleagues:
"If the state legislatures are suffered
to regulate conclusively the elections of the democratic branch,
they may . . . finally annihilate that control of the general
government, which the people ought always to have . . . ."
Id., at 26.
And Cabot was supported by Mr. Parsons, who
added:
"They might make an unequal and partial
division of the states into districts for the election of representatives,
or they might even disqualify one third of the electors. Without
these powers in Congress, the people can have no remedy; but the
4th section provides a remedy, a controlling power in a legislature,
composed of senators and representatives of twelve states, without
the influence of our commotions and factions, who will hear impartially,
and preserve and restore to the people their equal and sacred
rights of election." Id., at 27.
3 See Wesberry
v. Sanders, 376 U.S. 1, 14-16 (1964).
4 See, e.
g., Act of Aug. 8, 1911, 37 Stat. 13.
5 My Brother
STEWART has cited the debates of the Constitutional Convention
to show that Ellsworth, Mason, Madison, and Franklin successfully
opposed granting Congress the power to regulate federal elections,
including the qualifications of voters, in the original Constitution.
I read the history of our Constitution differently. Mr. Madison,
for example, explained Art. I, § 4, to the Virginia ratifying
convention as follows:
"It was thought that the regulation of
time, place, and manner, of electing the representatives, should
be uniform throughout the continent. Some States might regulate
the elections on the principles of equality, and others might
regulate them otherwise. This diversity would be obviously unjust.
. . . Should the people of any state by any means be deprived
of the right of suffrage, it was judged proper that it should
be remedied by the general government." 3 J. Elliot's Debates
on the Federal Constitution 367 (1876).
And Mr. Mason, who was supposedly successful
in opposing a broad grant of power to Congress to regulate federal
elections, still found it necessary to support an unsuccessful
Virginia proposal to curb the power of Congress under Art. I,
§ 4. Id., at 403.
6 See, e.
g., Ex parte Siebold, 100 U.S. 371 (1880); Ex parte Yarbrough,
110 U.S. 651 (1884); United States v. Mosley, 238 U.S. 383 (1915);
United States v. Classic, 313 U.S. 299 (1941).
7 With reference
to the selection of the President and Vice President, Art. II,
§ 1, provides: "Each State shall appoint, in such Manner
as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal
to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the
State may be entitled in the Congress . . . ." But this Court
in Burroughs v. United States, 290 U.S. 534 (1934), upheld the
power of Congress to regulate certain aspects of elections for
presidential and vice-presidential electors, specifically rejecting
a construction of Art. II, § 1, that would have curtailed
the power of Congress to regulate such elections. Finally, and
most important, inherent in the very concept of a supreme national
government with national officers is a residual power in Congress
to insure that those officers represent their national constituency
as responsively as possible. This power arises from the nature
of our constitutional system of government and from the Necessary
and Proper Clause.
8 "The
powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution,
nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States
respectively, or to the people." U.S. Const., Amdt. X.
9 "The
House of Representatives shall be composed of Members chosen every
second Year by the People of the several States, and the Electors
in each State shall have the Qualifications requisite for Electors
of the most numerous Branch of the State Legislature."
10 My
Brother BRENNAN relies upon Carrington v. Rash, 380 U.S. 89 (1965);
Cipriano v. City of Houma, 395 U.S. 701 (1969); and Evans v. Cornman,
398 U.S. 419 (1970). These typical equal protection cases in which
I joined are not relevant or material to our decision in the cases
before us. The establishment of voter age qualifications is a
matter of legislative judgment which cannot be properly decided
under the Equal Protection Clause. The crucial question here is
not who is denied equal protection, but, rather, which political
body, state or federal, is empowered to fix the minimum age of
voters. The Framers intended the States to make the voting age
decision in all elections with the provision that Congress could
override state judgments concerning the qualifications of voters
in federal elections.
11 See:
the First Amendment, e. g., Gitlow v. New York, 268 U.S. 652 (1925);
Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U.S. 296 (1940); Edwards v. South
Carolina, 372 U.S. 229 (1963); the Fourth Amendment, Mapp v. Ohio,
367 U.S. 643 (1961); the Fifth Amendment, Chicago, B. & Q.
R. Co. v. Chicago, 166 U.S. 226 (1897); Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S.
1 (1964); Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969); the Sixth Amendment,
Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335 (1963); Pointer v. Texas, 380
U.S. 400 (1965); Klopfer v. North Carolina, 386 U.S. 213 (1967);
Duncan v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 145 (1968); and the Eighth Amendment,
Robinson v. California, 370 U.S. 660 (1962).
12 Yuma
County, Arizona, is presently subject to the literacy-test ban
of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 pursuant to a determination of
the Attorney General under § 4 (a) of the 1965 Act. I do
not understand Arizona to contest the application of the 1965
Act or its extension to that county. Arizona "does not question"
Congress' authority to enforce the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments
"when Congress possesses a 'special legislative competence'";
and cites South Carolina v. Katzenbach, 383 U.S. 301 (1966), and
Katzenbach v. Morgan, 384 U.S. 641 (1966), with approval. Answer
and Brief for Arizona, No. 46, Orig., O. T. 1970.
13 Hearings
on H. R. 4249, H. R. 5538, and Similar Proposals before Subcommittee
No. 5 of the House Committee on the Judiciary, 91st Cong., 1st
Sess., Ser. 3, p. 14 (1969).
14 Id.,
at 93.
15 Hearings
on S. 818, S. 2456, S. 2507, and Title IV of S. 2029 before the
Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights of the Senate Committee
on the Judiciary, 91st Cong., 1st and 2d Sess., 406 (1969-1970).
16 Id.,
at 401.
17 That
these views are not novel is demonstrated by Mr. Justice Story
in his Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States,
vol. 2, pp. 284-285 (1st ed. 1833):
"There is, too, in the nature of such a provision [Art. I, § 4], something incongruous, if not absurd. What would be said of a clause introduced into the national constitution to regulate the state elections of the members of the state legislatures? It would be deemed a most unwarrantable transfer of power, indicating a premeditated design to destroy the state governments. It would be deemed so flagrant a violation of principle, as to require no comment. It would be said, and justly, that the state governments ought to possess the power of self-existence and self-organization, independent of the pleasure of the national government. Why does not the same reasoning apply to the national government? What reason is there to suppose, that the state governments will be more true to the Union, than the national government will be to the state governments?" (Emphasis added.) (Footnote omitted.)
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