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Press Release
LULAC GETS ITS DAY IN COURT
U.S. Supreme
Court to hear LULAC v. Perry.
December 12, 2005
Contact: Brenda Alvarez,
(202) 833-6130
Washington, DC – The
League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC)
will get its day in court as the U.S. Supreme
Court agreed to hear the case of the
controversial Texas congressional redistricting
map. LULAC filed a lawsuit challenging the
Texas legislature’s redistricting plan, which
was spearheaded by former House Majority Leader
Tom Delay, on the grounds that it violated the
Voting Rights Act of the Latino community in
Texas.
LULAC has an unyielding policy
that justice should not be blinded at the
expense of American citizens. Decisions by
political officials should be based on legal
facts that protect the interests of all
Americans, particularly disadvantaged minority
groups. The redistricting plan is retrogressive
and if not overturned will roll back Latino
political gains in Texas.
“We’re elated to know that we
still have another opportunity to challenge what
we consider to be a blatant, illegal and
partisan maneuver to weaken the Hispanic and
black vote,” said Hector Flores, national
president of LULAC. “However, we remain
appalled at the political gerrymandering that
occurred in 2003 and the conscious effort by
political appointees to divert justice by
overriding the recommendations of those most
knowledgeable in the field of the voting rights
law.”
Flores continued: “The
disingenuous promoters of the redistricting plan
have made no secret of the fact that this is a
flagrant attempt to increase their numbers in
Congress at the expense of the voting rights of
the Latino community in Texas. Attempting to
gloss over these partisan motivations with
dubious claims of increased Hispanic
representation is offensive, misleading and
cynical.”
Career attorneys from the
Justice Department ruled that the plan illegally
diluted the Hispanic and black voting power in
two congressional districts, as well as
eliminate several other districts in which
minorities had a substantial influence in
elections. After political appointees overruled
six lawyers and two analysts from the Justice
Department, the plan passed through the
Legislature and shifted the partisan balance in
the state’s congressional delegation from a
17-15 Democratic majority to a 21-11 Republican
majority after the 2004 elections. This
decision resulted in Texas Republicans gaining
five seats in the U.S. House in the 2004
elections and solidifying GOP control of
Congress.
Supporters of the plan
emphasize that the redistricting map helped to
elect one additional black congressman.
Although LULAC applauds the election of a
minority leader, it remains certain this
decision has limited Hispanic representation.
LULAC will appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court and
ask the court to overturn this unprecedented
decision.
“We have a fervent hope that
when the Supreme Court revisits this issue, they
will act prudently and impartially, as well as
recognize that the political actions stimulated
by DeLay and his cronies are illegal and are not
in the best interest of Texas or our country,”
said Luis Vera, general counsel of LULAC.
The League of the United Latin
American Citizen (www.lulac.org)
advances the economic conditions, educational
attainment, political influence, health and
civil rights of Hispanic Americans through
community-based programs operating at more than
700 LULAC councils nationwide.
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