Trump did not elaborate on how exactly he thought the election would be rigged, though he did make mention of his displeasure that a federal court had struck down a North Carolina voter ID law that the court said was specifically aimed at
disenfranchising black voters.
Assemblyman David Gantt blasted the original plan for dividing up the city, claiming
it disenfranchised black voters.
Not exact matches
Minority lawmakers in both chambers have been speaking out about the Senate's plan, which they say
disenfranchises black and Latino
voters all over the state, but particularly in NYC, on Long Island and in the Rochester and Buffalo areas.
Once they had the data showing the majority of
voters who did not own a drivers license were
black, which is what they were looking for, they passed a
voter I.D. law saying you had to have a drivers license to vote, thus
disenfranchising thousands of
black voters.
Especially when you consider that Alabama Republicans in control of state government have worked for the past decade to
disenfranchise minority
voters through efforts such as closing motor vehicle branches in
Black communities, a key way of frustrating
voter registration.