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  1. #1
    working4change
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    Texas Redistricting Voting Maps Discriminate, DOJ Says

    Texas Redistricting Voting Maps Discriminate, DOJ Says



    The Texas' new voting maps for Congress and for the Texas House do not meet federal anti discrimination requirements, the US Department of Justice said in a court filing Monday, setting up a legal battle that has Latinos square in the middle of it all.

    The case, which involves the election districts drawn by the Republican-led Texas Legislature, will likely be decided by a federal court in Washington, D.C.

    Texas received four new congressional seats following the last census, more than any other state. The new congressional map was drawn with the goal of protecting and possibly expanding the 23-9 majority enjoyed by Republicans in Texas' delegation in Washington.

    Another trial wrapped up last week in San Antonio, in which Democrats and minority groups argued the new voting districts don't reflect the statewide Hispanic population boom over the past decade in Texas.

    Hispanics have accounted for two-thirds of the state's growth since 2000. Yet during the two-week federal trial, opponents argued that GOP mapmakers went out of their way to stifle those gains and deny Hispanics greater voting power. Democrats argued that the map passed by the Texas Legislature this summer simply packed Hispanics and blacks into the same districts.

    District boundaries are redrawn every 10 years to reflect changes in census data. Any changes to Texas' voting practices must be cleared by a federal court or the Justice Department to ensure changes do not discriminate based on race or color.

    The Justice Department took issue with the maps for Congress and the Texas House, but it agreed with the state attorney general that maps for the Texas Senate and State Board of Education met requirements under the federal Voting Rights Act.

    The agency denied that the congressional and House plans maintain or increase the ability of minority voters to elect their candidate of choice, as required by federal law.

    "The D.C. court will have to hear these issues fully and we will have a chance to put in our evidence supporting why we think that the plan should not be pre-cleared," said Nina Perales, an attorney for the Mexican American Legal and Defense Fund, which has joined the defendants in the case.

    "Now, it's going to have to be decided by the court."



    Based on reporting by the Associated Press.

    Read more: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/politi ... z1YUrQcbeI

  2. #2
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    TX
    Posts
    212
    As long as the Census does not vette and distinguish legal from illegal in it's results I have a HUGE problem with it being used to determine ANYTHING other than population's basic demographics.


    The weight of any legal voter's vote should NEVER be lessened in consideration of an illegal vote. Period.

    There is no such thing as "reverse" racism or discrimination, that's a misnomer and a non-thing, it's all either racism and/or discrimination or it's not. It does not change because the victim is not "minority."
    I don't care who you are, how you got here, what color you are, what language/dialect you speak... If you didn't get here legally then you don't belong here. Period.

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