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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 20, 2012 FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: Christina Sanders, State Director Texas

League of Young Voters Education Fund 281-849-VOTE (8683), christina@youngvoter.org Lee Daniels, Director of Communications NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. 212-965-2271, ldaniels@naacpldf.org

Texas League of Young Voters Education Fund Files Motion in Federal District Court to Intervene in Texass Discriminatory Photo ID Lawsuit
Houston, TexasYesterday, the Texas League of Young Voters Education Fund and a group of Black college students at Prairie View A & M and Texas Southern universities, represented by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc., filed a motion to intervene in a lawsuit to prevent the implementation of a discriminatory photo ID law, and to defend the constitutionality of the Voting Rights Act. In the lawsuit, Texas v. Holder, Texas asks a federal court to approve, under the Section 5 preclearance provision of the Voting Rights Act, one of the most restrictive government-issued photo identification laws in the country. In the alternative, Texas asks the court to strike down Section 5, the heart of the Voting Rights Act, as unconstitutional. Texas previously asked the United States Department of Justice to approve its photo ID law. But just last week, the DOJs Civil Rights Division blocked Texas from enforcing its new law, contending that the law would disproportionately affect eligible voters of color, who are more likely to lack accepted forms of photo ID than eligible white voters. Many of our student members voted in previous elections in Texas using the only form of identification they hada state-issued student IDwhich would no longer be acceptable under Texass proposed photo ID law, said Christina Sanders, Director of the Texas League of Young Voters Education Fund. While a student ID will not satisfy Texass proposed ID measure, a concealed handgun license will. Section 5 protects against the implementation of this type of law, which threatens to disfranchise many students of color who seek to exercise their protected right to vote. LDF previously urged the Department of Justice during the preclearance comment process to reject Texass photo ID measure after the Texas League of Young Voters Education Fund determined that many students at historically Black colleges in Texas, like Prairie View A&M and Texas Southern, would be stripped of their voting rights because they do not have and cannot easily obtain a Texas state-issued identification card other than their student ID cards. Our clients seek to join this case to illustrate the discriminatory nature of Texass photo ID measure, and the true costs and burdens of obtaining the underlying documents necessary to secure Texass so-called free photo ID, said Natasha Korgaonkar, LDF Assistant Counsel. Our experience teaches us that a students ability to pay a fee should not determine whether they can vote. -more-

Texas League intervenes in Texas Photo ID lawsuit (page 2) Fortunately, Section 5 serves as our democracys checkpoint by preventing discriminatory voting changes from being implemented, said John Payton, LDF President and Director-Counsel. Texass discriminatory photo ID measure demonstrates precisely why, in the face of persisting obstacles for minority voters, Section 5 is still necessary. Voter ID laws in Texas, and in other states, disproportionately weaken the voting strength of voters of color. Nationally, only 8% of white voting age citizens, but 25% of African American voting age citizens, lack a government-issued photo ID. As a result, thousands of college students across Texas, which is home to several historically Black colleges and universities, risk being denied their voting rights. About the Texas League of Young Voters Education Fund The Texas League of Young Voters Education Fund is an affiliate of the League of Young Voters Education Fund, headquartered in Brooklyn, New York. The League empowers young people to participate in the democratic process and create progressive political change on the local, state and national level with a focus on noncollege youth and youth from lowincome communities and communities of color. The League makes political engagement relevant by meeting young people where they are, working on issues that affect their lives, and providing them with the tools, training, and support to become serious catalysts for change in their communities. The League has field operations in the following states: California, Maine, Ohio, Texas and Wisconsin. For more information, please visit www.youngvoter.org

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