Political Rights Section - August 1984 (National Conference of Black Lawyers)
Working File
August 6, 1984
Cite this item
-
Legal Department General, Lani Guinier Correspondence. Political Rights Section - August 1984 (National Conference of Black Lawyers), 1984. 1f9d9319-e792-ee11-be37-6045bdeb8873. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/7d54c584-64ec-406f-a0d4-48ceaba3031a/political-rights-section-august-1984-national-conference-of-black-lawyers. Accessed November 23, 2025.
Copied!
o
POLITICAI RIGHTS SECTION
AUGUST 1984
NCBL has joined a coalition of civil rights organiza-
tions in a Iitigation campaign to get the states to assume
more responsibility in getting the names of eligible voters
on the voting rolls. we are challenging voter registration
barriers that include the excessive delegation of authority
to local registrars who then refuse to appoint black
deputy registrars or to conduct registration outside the
county courthouse in locations convenient to the black commun-
ity during evenings or weekends. Suits have been filed in
Michigan, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and Connecticut.
In New York, NCBL has participated as amicus supporting
Governor cuomors registration initiative in a state rawsuit
brought by the Republican Party. Ttre Repr:blicans are chrallenging the Goverzrcr's
authority to order state employees to assist the public in
filling out registration applications. Almost 900r000 eligible
black voters (over 50t of the potential black electorate) in
New York state are not registered to vote. of those who are
registered, between 82t and 86t voted in 1980.