Greenberg Statement on Voting Rights for Illiterate Citizens
Press Release
June 10, 1968
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Press Releases, Volume 5. Greenberg Statement on Voting Rights for Illiterate Citizens, 1968. de5660ba-b892-ee11-be37-6045bddb811f. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/13b57791-7133-4641-9312-8db3e4514f95/greenberg-statement-on-voting-rights-for-illiterate-citizens. Accessed November 23, 2025.
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Statement by Jack Greenberg, director-counsel, NAACP Legal Defense Educational Fund, ine. ; Monday, June 10, 1968
The U.S. Supreme Court today, in announcing review of the case
of Allen v. State Board of Elections, which arises from Virginia,
will take up the LDF Challenge to denial of the right of privacy in
the voting booth for illiterate citizens who desire to cast a write-in
ballot. Negroes and the poor who have been denied equal education and
are unable to write in names of write-in candidates are permitted to
vote for someone not on the official ballot only if accompanied by
election officials. Our suit seeks to preserve their secret ballot
by use of some reasonable means of effecting a write-in without
exposing for whom the voter has voted.