Civil Rights Groups Examine Election

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Civil rights groups vowed to fight for the voting rights of blacks in future elections, after what they dubbed the "wake-up call" of the 2000 presidential election.
"We are going to be deputized to protect voting rights over the next four years in particular," said Rev. Walter Fauntroy, a former District of Columbia delegate who convened an event Thursday, advertised as a "national emergency summit" on the election.
Organizers contended that minorities nationwide were targeted in the Nov. 7 election for "voting while black."
The term is a reference to "driving while black," by which, civil rights groups contend, some police officers stop black drivers more often than whites because of racist attitudes.
Thursday's event, held at Howard University, featured a report by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which has gathered more than 450 complaints from people who say they were blocked from voting in Florida and elsewhere on Nov. 7.
"Almost as soon as the polls opened, we began to receive calls from all over the nation of voter irregularities," said Angela Ciccolo, the NAACP's assistant general counsel.
She said the NAACP's phones "have not stopped ringing since November 7."
© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. "We are going to be deputized to protect voting rights over the next four years in particular," said Rev. Walter Fauntroy, a former District of Columbia delegate who convened an event Thursday, advertised as a "national emergency summit" on the election.
Organizers contended that minorities nationwide were targeted in the Nov. 7 election for "voting while black."
The term is a reference to "driving while black," by which, civil rights groups contend, some police officers stop black drivers more often than whites because of racist attitudes.
Thursday's event, held at Howard University, featured a report by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which has gathered more than 450 complaints from people who say they were blocked from voting in Florida and elsewhere on Nov. 7.
"Almost as soon as the polls opened, we began to receive calls from all over the nation of voter irregularities," said Angela Ciccolo, the NAACP's assistant general counsel.
She said the NAACP's phones "have not stopped ringing since November 7."
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