For Immediate Release
Oct. 27, 2023
JACKSON – On Oct. 25, One Voice, MS NAACP, Civic Engagement Roundtable, MS Poor People’s Campaign, the Legal Defense Fund (LDF), and the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law raised concerns that counties throughout Mississippi are improperly purging voters, putting them on the inactive list or removing them without notice. During the event, the groups presented information gathered from circuit clerks’ offices throughout the state and sought to educate citizens who may have been removed from the voting rolls. Nsombi Lambright, executive director of One Voice and a member of the Black Southern Women’s Collaborative, released the following statement:
“The maintenance of voter rolls is a normal process of cleaning voter data, eliminating duplicates, removing persons who are deceased or have been convicted of a disfranchising felony and removing inactive voters. Unfortunately, our state has used this process as a voter suppression tool by dropping voters from the rolls without notice.
“Voter purging is the number one complaint from our voter protection hot line. It is very common for us to receive calls from voters who have voted at one place for years, only to discover that they are no longer eligible to vote at this place.
“We are urging Mississippians to check your voting status. Make sure that you still vote where you think that you vote. And make sure that your status is still active. You can verify this information through the Secretary of State’s website and through your local circuit clerk’s office. Voting is a human right, not a privilege. We have some very good circuit clerks and election commissioners who are committed to making sure that we all vote, but there are also those who want to take this right away. We cannot let them win.”
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