FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 

FAIR MAPS TEXAS ACTION COMMITTEE FILES FEDERAL LAWSUIT TO BLOCK RACIALLY DISCRIMINATORY TEXAS REDISTRICTING

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

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CIVIL RIGHTS GROUPS FILE FEDERAL LAWSUIT TO BLOCK RACIALLY DISCRIMINATORY TEXAS REDISTRICTING

 

Austin, T.X. (November 16, 2021) — Civil rights groups filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday, Fair Maps Texas Action Committee v. Abbott, challenging new Texas state legislative and Congressional district plans as unconstitutional racial gerrymanders violating both the Voting Rights Act and the U.S. Constitution. The suit details an inadequate redistricting process lacking transparency, which led to discriminatory voting maps that dilute the political power of communities of color, particularly Black, Latino, and Asian American & Pacific Islander (AAPI) voters.  

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The Southern Coalition for Social Justice (SCSJ), the ACLU of Texas, and the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund (AALDEF), brought the case on behalf of the Fair Maps Texas Action Committee, OCA-Greater Houston, the North Texas Chapter of the Asian Pacific Islander Americans Public Affairs Association, Emgage Texas and 13 individual plaintiffs in the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas, Austin Division.  

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Click here to view the full complaint.

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“Texas’ latest gerrymanders seek to blunt the political power of fast-growing populations of Latino, Black and Asian American and Pacific Islander voters by carving up the chance to elect their preferred candidates to the United States Congress, the Texas House of Representatives, and the Texas Senate,” Allison Riggs, Co-Executive Director and Chief Counsel for Voting Rights with SCSJ. “This intentional discrimination of voters of color in clear violation of the VRA and US Constitution cannot stand.”

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The Fair Maps Texas Action Committee includes the ACLU of Texas, Clean Elections Texas, League of Women Voters of Texas, Our Vote Texas, National Council of Jewish Women-Greater Dallas Section, Texans Against Gerrymandering, and Common Cause Texas.

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"Today, the Fair Maps Texas Action Committee is honored to join our partners from across the state to challenge the unconstitutional district maps recently passed by the State of Texas. Lawmakers have willfully ignored the rich diversity of our growing state and have instead chosen to draw maps that discriminate against voters of color,” said organizations from the Fair Maps Texas Action Committee in a joint statement. “From the very start of this legislative process, we worked to bring diverse people together so that all marginalized communities receive fair representation. Despite our best efforts to advocate for a fair and open redistricting process, the politicians in charge chose to shut the public out in order to force through blatantly gerrymandered maps. Now, we will take action together to challenge these unlawful maps because our democracy is threatened."

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Since the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965, Texas has not gone a single decade without a federal court finding that the state had violated federal protections for voters of color. In 2021, Texas lawmakers’ voting plans for State House districts (H2316), State Senate districts (S2168), and Congressional districts (C2193), repeat the Legislature's past mistakes. The complaint alleges that each plan discriminates against voters of color by failing to create coalition districts mandated by Section 2 of the VRA, intentionally dividing voters of color into several districts, and otherwise diluting the voting power of people of color. As the complaint documents, in areas like Fort Bend County, a diverse region near Houston, Texas, AAPI communities are cracked “with almost surgical precision,” depriving them of an equal opportunity to elect their candidates of choice.

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“Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) are the fastest growing racial group in America and especially in Texas. Together with their Black and Latino neighbors, AAPIs have already demonstrated that they vote together. It is clear that these new legislative district lines were drawn to intentionally divide these rapidly growing AAPI communities and prevent them and other communities of color from electing candidates of their choice. This continues Texas' shameful history of discriminating against voters of color,” Jerry Vattamala, Director of the Democracy Program with AALDEF. “This brazen attack on the voting rights of people of color in Texas is a fundamental attack on democracy and violates the Voting Rights Act and the Constitution. All Texans should be appalled at these blatantly discriminatory district lines.”

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The complaint specifically seeks to remedy discriminatory districts in many of Texas’ fastest-growing cities and suburban areas, where the political power of communities of color is exploited to the benefit of more conservative white areas. For example, the lawsuit identifies how Texas’ state House maps unfairly crack AAPI voters in Fort Bend and Collin counties among multiple districts, while House Districts 54 and 55 in Bell County brazenly split the city of Killeen, where 40% of residents are Black. The complaint also focuses on state Senate and Congressional maps where new districts in the Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston metros intentionally divide AAPI, Black, and Latino voters. The suit also points out that Texas’ Congressional maps create two new majority-white districts in a state where 95% of population growth stems from communities of color.

STATEMENTS FROM OUR COALITION MEMBERS

We are so proud to have worked alongside so many fearless individuals over the past 4 years. Texans deserve fair and equal representation, and we are not afraid to stand up and speak out to protect the rights of all voters!

“We, as part of the Fair Maps Texas Action Committee, are suing Governor Abbott over their district maps because they were intentionally drawn to silence Black, Brown, and APPI Texans in a process without a shred of transparency. Texas is just the latest state to suffer through an unfair redistricting process and gerrymandered maps. Without action from Congress this year, we won’t be the last,” said Anthony Gutierrez, executive director of Common Cause Texas. 

"The maps signed into law by Governor Abbott fundamentally fail to protect the voting power of minority communities as required by the United States Constitution and voting rights laws of this country.  By unjustly diluting the voting power of minority voters, the new district lines effectively disenfranchise a huge percentage of the legitimate and rightful voters of this state.   That disenfranchisement is an attack on democracy itself and must be stopped”, said Dave Jones, President, Clean Elections Texas.

“The League is happy to join our partners in fighting against clear racial gerrymandering by Texas legislators,” said Grace Chimene, President of the League of Women Voters of Texas. “The current maps are clearly discriminatory and violate the Voting Rights Act of 1965. All communities, no matter their race, deserve fair representation, yet our legislators have drawn electoral maps that silence the voices of communities of color in Texas.”

"Texans spoke out this year in no uncertain terms about the need for a fair and open district drawing process that would put the needs of our communities ahead of politics and at a multiple points along the way, our pleas were ignored in favor of hastily drawn district maps that fracture us and silence the voices of countless Texans, none more so than Black, AAPI and Latino communities. Our mission to advocate for Texas voters means we must continue working to ensure we all have a voice in shaping the future of our great state and so the fight for fair, representative maps must continue." 

-Valerie Street, President of Our Vote Texas

"Our communities need maps that are fair and equitable, developed in a fair, open, and transparent process. Our legislators have failed to create maps that accurately depict the diversity of our wonderful state." -Lydia Ozuna, President of Texans Against Gerrymandering

 

"Texas has once again drawn electoral districts to ensure minority voters in diverse places are silenced,” David Donatti, Staff Attorney with the ACLU of Texas. “Places like Fort Bend County, where I grew up, have some of the fastest-growing communities of color in Texas and yet those voices will not be heard during election times because of the way these maps are drawn... We are suing to stop Texas’s discriminatory gamesmanship; our democracy hangs in the balance.”

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