It's Wednesday, August 6th.
I'm Jane Koston, and this is What A Day,
the show enjoying another episode of A Republican Town Hall Goes Horribly Wrong.
Here's Nebraska Republican Representative Mike Flood finding out just how his constituents feel about President Donald Trump's big,
beautiful law gutting Medicaid.
And more than anything, I truly believe this bill protects Medicaid for the future.
You're doing great, sweetie.
On today's show,
Trump signs an executive order establishing a task force on the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.
And Rwanda becomes the third African nation to agree to take in U.S. deportees.
But let's start by talking about the Voting Rights Act, which turned 60 today.
The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed at the peak of the civil rights movement.
It was aimed at ensuring that the constitutional right to vote could actually be enjoyed by actual black Americans.
Before its passage,
millions of them were subject to bullshit voting tests that kept them out of the voting booth and out of political power.
And when I say bullshit voting tests, I mean like literacy tests,
moral character tests, or the so-called grandfather clause,
which helped ensure that no one whose grandfather couldn't vote, say,
because they were slaves, would be able to do so themselves.
The Voting Rights Act ended that, but now it's at risk, or at least what's left of it.