With state legislatures across the country pushing through restrictive voting laws effectively suppressing the pool of eligible voters — in many cases in minority communities — the NAACP is fighting back.
The civil rights group kicked off their “This is My Vote” campaign in Georgia yesterday, an effort to combat suppressive voter-identification laws by registering hundreds of thousands of young minorities to vote.
The surge in voter registration efforts pushes back on an influx of Republican-led state legislatures that have put controversial voter ID laws on the books requiring voters to supply a government-issued identification, and in some cases prove citizenship, in order to vote.
NAACP President Ben Jealous has spoken out against voter ID laws, comparing them to modern-day “Jim Crow.” And though black voters turned out in historic numbers for President Obama’s election in 2008, Jealous yesterday warned of the legislative efforts to curb minority voter turnout.
“Were we students of history, we would’ve expected that night, when everybody was celebrating, that we needed to be preparing for what we’re dealing with right now,” he said, referring to election night 2008. “We saw the largest most diverse presidential electorate this country has ever seen.









