Thursday, August 06, 2009

Appeals Court Hears Mississippi Voting Rights Case Sparked by Inclusion of College Voters

Appeals Court Hears Mississippi Voting Rights Case Sparked by Inclusion of College Voters: A federal appeals court is reviewing the dismissal of a lawsuit that claims Black voters in Hattiesburg, Miss., have been marginalized by the city's decision to count thousands of college students in drawing its ward boundary lines.

Lawyers for the southern Mississippi city on Monday asked the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to uphold a lower court's ruling that Hattiesburg's inclusion of college students for redistricting didn't violate the Voting Rights Act of 1965. A three-judge panel from the appeals court didn't immediately rule.

Ellis Turnage, an attorney for several Black Hattiesburg voters who are named as plaintiffs in the suit, said Blacks in 2005 accounted for an estimated 52 percent of the city's registered voters but have had their voting strength diluted by racial gerrymandering.