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For decades, the Voting Rights Act was the country’s strongest safeguard against racial discrimination in elections. It didn’t just promise the right to vote—it enforced it.
In Episode 12, Bella Goode explains how that safeguard has been systematically weakened over the past decade. Not through a single repeal, but through Supreme Court decisions, shifts in enforcement, and administrative strategy that leave the law standing on paper while stripping away its power in practice.
This episode traces how protections were dismantled step by step—and what that means for who actually holds power in American democracy.
What This Episode Covers
Why It Matters
The weakening of the Voting Rights Act isn’t an abstract legal story. It determines who gets elected to school boards, city councils, state legislatures, and Congress—and whose communities are locked out by maps, rules, and enforcement choices that are increasingly hard to challenge.
When protections are weakened at the federal level, discrimination doesn’t disappear. It simply shifts to quieter places, closer to home.
Understanding how this happened—and where it’s headed—is essential to understanding how minority rule is being constructed in plain sight.
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Bella Goode is a pseudonym — but the voice, research, and mission are all real. A Republican turned Democrat advocate in 2016, I was raised by middle class parents in Pennsylvania. I’m a former marketing executive, entrepreneur, and lifelong learner with an MBA from Wharton and a Master’s in Psychology from Penn. I spent decades telling stories in the business world; now I use those skills to connect the dots in American politics.
I’m here because the truth matters — and because the stakes have never been higher. Surviving Trump isn’t lighthearted. It’s clarity, evidence, and a fight for the future of our democracy.
Follow my blog on Substack https://survivingtrumppodcast.substack.com