Civil rights leaders and local elected officials emerged optimistic and determined to help protect the right the vote after a closed-door meeting with President Obama in which they discussed the way forward after last month’s Shelby County v. Holder ruling gutted the Voting Rights Act.
Obama said he was disappointed in the Supreme Court’s decision in the hours after it was announced, but promised to continue the fight against “voting discrimination.”
Attorney General Eric Holder and Labor Secretary Tom Perez attended. Perez served as Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, where he oversaw many voting issues, before Obama nominated him to run the Labor Department this year. Representatives from a wide variety of civil rights groups attended the meeting, including the National Action Network, NAACP, ACLU, National Council of La Raza, Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, and National Urban League.
Rev. Al Sharpton said after the event that he and others in attendance were encouraged by commitment of both Obama and Holder to protecting voting rights. He also said that his and other civil rights groups represented at the meeting will be working with the DOJ in their fight to collect evidence of discrimination.
“We’ve been assured by the president and attorney general that they will continue to aggressively fight to protect the right of all Americans to vote,” he said. “They are open to many of us on the ground to continue to use the Voting Rights Act–it is not dead–and to resources to bring information of any violation of voting rights directly to the Justice Department.”
“There is a wound in the voting rights act but it is far from dead, it is not even on critical, and we intend to use the information that we have today to assure our constituents that we intend to aggressively fight to protect those rights in all communities, which is why everyone–the Latino, the Asian, the black communities–were represented in this meeting today,” he added.
Barbara Arnwine, of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law spoke about the role that coalition will play in the effort to help convince Congress to move forward towards fully reinstating the Voting Rights Act.
“We will be working very closely with all the groups here and others to conduct hearings across the country in order to help Congress develop the record that is needed [to protect voters,]” she said.
“We’ve marched in Alabama together against voter suppression and against the anti-immigration laws,” Janet Murguía of the National Council of La Raza said. “And I just think the strength of this coalition represents the strong unity and commitment that everyone must have that right to vote.”
That coalition of groups represented at Monday’s meeting also included the ACLU, NAACP, Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, and Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, among others.
Many of the leaders in attendance spoke about the role that the events celebrating the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington will play in the continuing battle for voting rights.









