A Latino civil rights organization filed a lawsuit in federal court today against Texas' effort to identify noncitizens who are registered to vote.
The lawsuit brought by the the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) argues state officials violated the Voting Rights Act when they advised local registrars to remove alleged noncitizens from their voter rolls.
In the filing, the group says Texas Secretary of State David Whitley and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton have combined efforts to 鈥渋ntimidate people who are currently legitimately registered to vote into de-registering or just not voting (or both) in the upcoming May 2019 election.鈥
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Domingo Garcia, the president of LULAC, told KUT his group wants to block local officials from removing the voters from rolls and for the state to clarify how it compiled the list of 95,000 voters.
鈥淲e are going to be able to show that at the end that all of these were legitimate U.S. voters,鈥 Garcia said. 鈥淚n the end this is really about voter suppression, not voter fraud.鈥
, Whitley told local voter registrars the Texas Department of Public Safety had found as many as 95,000 people who identified as non-U.S. citizens when they obtained a state ID within the last 22 years. In that same time period, those individuals also registered to vote, state officials argue.
In a statement, Whitley said his office is checking to see if those individuals voted while they were non-citizens. He said it's part of his committment to use "all available tools under the law to maintain an accurate list of registered voters."
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But voting rights groups say the list is misleading and the motivations behind it are political.
鈥淲hat the Secretary of State is doing 鈥 and knowingly doing 鈥 is taking a list of people who have recently become U.S. citizens and registered to vote whom the Secretary of State knows got their driver鈥檚 licenses or state IDs while they were still permanent resident immigrants,鈥 said Nina Perales with MALDEF, a Latino legal defense group.
Attorneys for various civil rights groups in the state issued a letter to the Secretary of State's office demanding that he rescind the advisory sent out last week and threatened possible legal action.
The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas in San Antonio. Florida and Colorado have also attempted to remove alleged noncitizens from voter rolls; officials in both states were sued over their efforts.
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