The National Coalition on Black Civic Participation

NCBCP Headlines

Voter ID laws provoking black women, who had highest turnout in 2008, to turn out voters

SUZANNE GAMBOA
The Washington Post
Sep 20, 2012

WASHINGTON — Deidra Reese isn’t waiting for people to come to her to find out whether they are registered to vote.

With iPad in hand, Reese is going to community centers, homes and churches in nine Ohio cities, looking up registrations to make sure voters have proper ID and everything else they need to cast ballots on Election Day.

“We are not going to give back one single inch. We have fought too long and too hard,” said Reese, 45, coordinator of the Columbus-based Ohio Unity Coalition, an affiliate of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation.

Reese is part of a cadre of black women engaged in a revived wave of voting rights advocacy four years after the historic election of the nation’s first black president. Provoked by voting law changes in various states, they have decided to help voters navigate the system — a fitting role, they say, given that black women had the highest turnout of any group of voters in 2008.

Read the full story by Suzanne Gamboa of Associate Press here

National Coalition on Black Civic Participation | 1050 Connecticut Avenue, NW, 5th Floor - Suite 500, Washington, DC 20023, USA.

Phone: (202) 659-4929 | ncbcp@ncbcp.org

© 2023 National Coalition on Black Civic Participation. All rights reserved. Powered by ARCOS | Design by PlusThree