Mel Gagarin
NAACP Legal Defense Fund
1-212-965-2783
mgagarin@naacpldf.org
(BLACK PR WIRE)NEW YORK, April 29 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- On Wednesday, the United States Supreme Court will hear a constitutional challenge to a core provision of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 in Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District Number One v. Holder. The Legal Defense Fund will present argument to the Court in defense of the law in a case that is widely regarded as one of the most important voting rights cases in recent time. At issue is the Section 5 preclearance provision which requires a select number of jurisdictions with a history of racial discrimination in voting to submit new voting laws to the Department of Justice or a federal court for preapproval -- a process known as preclearance. The Appellant, a small Texas-based utility district, filed the case seeking to end its responsibility for having its voting changes reviewed but more significantly to have the preclearance provision of the Act declared unconstitutional. U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia rejected the suit last spring finding Congress well within its authority to renew this key provision of the Voting Rights Act in light of significant evidence of ongoing voting discrimination in the jurisdictions where the law applies.
"The Voting Rights Act has literally transformed our democracy and our country. Section 5 cut right through the determined resistance to Black political participation by requiring that certain states with entrenched histories of discrimination obtain preapproval before implementing new voting laws," said John Payton, LDF President and Director-Counsel. Payton observed that the "the Voting Rights Act does not stand at the periphery of our nation's long march to greater political equality -- it lies at its core."
The case arose when a small utility district in Austin, Texas, filed a 2006 lawsuit days after President Bush signed the law extending the Act for 25 years. Texas is one of a select number of states covered by Section 5 because of its well-documented history of voting discrimination -- a history recently noted by the Supreme Court in a 2006 case concerning a mid-decade redistricting plan. Section 5 has blocked and deterred hundreds of discriminatory voting practices in Texas and other states where the law applies.
Debo P. Adegbile, LDF Director of Litigation, will argue the case on behalf of Appellee Intervenors, alongside the United States. "This law keeps us on the road to progress and there is no good reason for us to chart a different path," observed Adegbile. Other Intervenors in the litigation are represented by the nation's leading voting rights advocates including MALDEF, ACLU, the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, PFAW, Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, and the law firm of Wilmer, Cutler, Pickering, Hale & Dorr.
ABOUT LDF
The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDF) is America's legal counsel on issues of race. Through advocacy and litigation, LDF focuses on issues of education, voter protection, economic justice and criminal justice. We encourage students to embark on careers in the public interest through scholarships and internship programs. LDF pursues racial justice to move our nation toward a society that fulfills the promise of equality for all.
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Debo Adegbile
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John Payton
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