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Contact Congress about S. 2523: John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2025

Some states and local election offices would need federal approval before using certain voting changes. The bill also adds public notice rules, stronger court tools, and new protections for voters and election workers.

Modern Action explains legislation in plain English, helps you choose whether to support, oppose, or ask for changes, and drafts a message tied to the bill, your stance, and the elected officials who can act on it.

John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2025 is a Senate bill in committee. The latest recorded action: Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. (text: CR S4821).

Latest action on S. 2523: Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. (text: CR S4821)

Who this affects: This bill mainly affects voters in places where race, color, language, or tribal status may shape access to the ballot. It also directly affects state and local election offices, which may need federal approval or new public notices before changing election rules. Courts, the U.S. Department of Justice, advocacy groups, election workers, poll watchers, and small local governments would also see new rules or tools.

Why this matters: This bill matters because it could stop some voting rules before they affect an election. Today, many voting-rights fights happen after a rule is already in place. The bill would shift more disputes into early review, public notice, and fast court action. Its real effect would depend on which places are covered, how often officials propose covered changes, and how courts apply the new tests.

Key provisions in S. 2523

  • The bill puts the Supreme Court’s Thornburg v. Gingles test into federal law for vote-dilution cases. Vote dilution means a map or election system weakens a protected group’s voting power. It also sets rules for vote-denial and intentional-discrimination cases under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.
  • The bill adds a retrogression rule for voting changes made on or after January 1, 2021. A change could violate the law if it makes it harder for protected groups to vote or elect their preferred candidates.
  • The bill creates a new 10-year federal approval rule. States and local areas would be covered if they have the required number of recent voting-rights violations, such as court findings, federal objections, or some settlements, during the past 25 years.
  • The bill creates nationwide review for certain voting changes before they can take effect. Covered changes include shifts to at-large elections, some boundary or redistricting changes, stricter ID or document rules, less multilingual voting help, polling-place or Sunday-voting cuts in diverse areas, and new voter-roll cleanup methods that hit racial or language groups harder.
  • States and many local governments would have to give public and online notice within 48 hours for most federal election rule changes. They would also have to publish detailed polling-place and district-change information in formats people with disabilities can use.

How Modern Action helps you take action on S. 2523

You do not have to start with a blank letter. Modern Action turns the bill, your position, and the relevant congressional context into a message you can edit and send. The goal is to make contacting Congress clear, specific, and useful without forcing you to parse bill text or figure out the right office on your own.

Questions people ask about S. 2523

What is S. 2523?
Some states and local election offices would need federal approval before using certain voting changes. The bill also adds public notice rules, stronger court tools, and new protections for voters and election workers.
How do I support or oppose S. 2523?
Choose support, oppose, or ask for changes on Modern Action. The action flow drafts the message for you and keeps the wording tied to this bill.
Who should I contact about S. 2523?
Modern Action uses your location to route the action to the congressional offices relevant to the bill and your representation.
Can Modern Action explain S. 2523 before I act?
Yes. Modern Action gives you a plain-English summary, current status, and action context before you send anything.

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More ways to act on this issue

Compare the broader issue and related bills without leaving Modern Action.

Related issues

  • Contact your reps on Federal review before voting changesSome voting changes would need federal approval before taking effect when there is a strong risk they could harm voters because of race, color, or language group.
  • Contact your reps on Protections against discriminatory voting mapsThese bills address when federal voting-rights law should block election rules or district maps that harm voters because of race, color, or language group.
  • Contact your reps on Voting rights and Supreme Court developmentsFollow federal bills that respond to voting-rights court cases, including protections against discriminatory voting rules, federal review before risky changes, election observers, language access, and fair map-drawing standards.

Related bills

  • Take action on H.R. 14: John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2025
  • Take action on S. 2885: Redistricting Reform Act of 2025
  • Take action on H.R. 5921: Redistricting Transparency and Accountability Act of 2025
  • Take action on H.R. 5426: John Tanner and Jim Cooper Fairness and Independence in Redistricting Act
  • Take action on H.R. 5449: Redistricting Reform Act of 2025