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Press
Releases
October
28, 2004
CONTACT:
Marjorie Press Lindblom
(212) 446-4868 Kirkland & Ellis
call center;
Kay Shaw (212) 965-2200 NAACP LDF call
center; or Michael Cooper (212) 558-3712
Sullivan & Cromwell call center
(New
York, NY) - With less than one week to go
before Election Day 2004, the Election Protection
Coalition will launch the nationwide, nonpartisan
Know Your Rights/Election Protection Program
in New York City on Monday, November 1st.
The
Election Protection Program provides voter
information and assistance, expert legal help,
poll monitors to help voters understand their
rights, and voter assistance when problems
arise. Election Protection targets historically
disenfranchised communities, including Hispanic,
African-American and low-income communities,
by providing these voters with key information
and advice.
Starting
on Monday, November 1st, the toll-free number
(1-866-OUR-VOTE) will be staffed by legal
volunteers trained to provide voters with
free legal help. In addition, legal volunteers
will be on the ground monitoring selected
polling places and will be available to intervene
in person or place telephone calls to the
appropriate election official.
The
five New York City call centers will have
over 200 lines available to hotline callers
across the nation and will be open from 6a.m.
to 9p.m EST.
No
one, regardless of race or ethnicity, should
be denied the right to vote, said Marjorie
Press Lindblom, a partner in the New York
office of Kirkland & Ellis LLP and co-chair
of The Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights
Under Law. The right to vote is central
to our democracy and is guaranteed by the
U.S. Constitution. The goal of the Election
Protection initiative is to make sure that
people are not deprived of this most fundamental
democratic right.
"The
significance of the national nonpartisan Election
Protection effort is best illustrated through
the enthusiasm and commitment of the scores
of people who have volunteered their time
and energy to help ensure that a measure of
basic fairness is restored to the electoral
process on November 2, 2004," said Debo
Adegbile, Associate Director of Litigation
for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational
Fund.
Election
Protection is needed now more than ever. State
election officials face new requirements under
the Help America Vote Act. New and unfamiliar
electronic voting machines will be used in
some states. Unparalleled numbers of new voters
are expected to go to the polls this year.
Election Protection is committed to making
our system work, educating voters about their
rights, and preparing for problems before
they arise.
"Now
more than ever, we need Election Protection,"
said Tatia Miller, a lawyer at Debevoise &
Plimpton LLP, one of the firms operating as
a Command Center for the Election Protection
Program. "Unparalleled numbers of new
voters are expected to go to the polls this
year and Election Protection is committed
to fighting the widespread voter disenfranchisement
left in the wake of the 2000 election. It
is critical that every single person who wants
to vote has resources available to them that
will ensure their rights are protected and
their voices are heard."
Election
Protection is the nations most ambitious
non-partisan program for preventing Election
Day disenfranchisement. The coalition of state
and national allies seeks to ensure that every
eligible voter casts a ballot that counts
on Election Day.
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