Civil Rights Orgs File Amicus Brief in Opposition to Texas’ Racially Discriminatory Congressional Map

Affiliate: Ƶ of Texas
September 15, 2025 3:27 pm

Ƶ Affiliate
Media Contact
125 Broad Street
18th Floor
New York, NY 10004
United States

Today, nonprofit, nonpartisan civil rights and racial justice organizations filed an in support of the plaintiffs’ motions for preliminary injunction in League of United Latin American Citizens, et al., v. State of Texas, et al. The amicus curiae or “friend of the court” brief argues that the Court should block Texas’s newly enacted and racially discriminatory 2025 congressional map from going into effect before the 2026 elections.

The amicus brief, which provides additional information to the court, was filed on behalf of the Ƶ, Ƶ of Texas, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., Black Voters Matter, the Austin Area Urban League, Dallas-Fort Worth Urban League, Houston Area Urban League, Barbara Jordan Leadership Institute, Friendship-West Baptist Church, Legal Defense Fund, and League of Women Voters of Texas, who issued a joint statement:

“Black voters and other voters of color are not pawns to be wielded in a shameful, extreme power grab. The use of the new congressional map will severely harm their opportunities to elect their preferred candidates who understand their communities’ needs and will fight with them to help tackle the very real and persistent issues they face. The Constitution does not permit Texas to harm Black voters and other voters of color as a means of augmenting political power. We must never sacrifice ground in the fight to secure fully equal and fair representation for Black voters and other communities. The survival of our multiracial democracy in Texas and across our nation depends on it.”

In August, during an extraordinary special session calling for mid-decade redistricting, the Texas legislature a congressional map that weakens electoral opportunities for Black and Hispanic voters, particularly in the Harris County and the Dallas/Fort Worth area. Texas surgically targeted for redrawing these districts with significant numbers of Black and Hispanic voters. Rather than addressing the constitutional issues in Texas’s prior congressional map, the legislature doubled down on racial discrimination by again using an impermissibly race-driven process to enact a new congressional map that discriminates against Black and Hispanic voters.

In attempting to conceal their discrimination, the Texas legislature passed the new congressional map in a rushed, non-transparent, and non-democratic process, ignoring overwhelming public testimony warning of the harms the new map would bring to Black and other Texans.

Texas is home to the in the country. Opportunities for Black and Hispanic voters are not zero sum. It is possible in a fairly drawn congressional map to protect the electoral opportunities for both Black and Hispanic voters.

The amicus brief can be found online here: https://assets.aclu.org/live/uploads/2025/09/LULAC-TX-Amicus-Br.pdf

Learn More Ƶ the Issues in This Press Release