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Allison Riggs

Co-Executive Director / Chief Counsel, Voting Rights
allisonriggs@scsj.org

Allison Riggs leads the voting rights program at the Southern Coalition for Social Justice, an organization she joined in 2009.  In March of 2020, she also took over as Interim Executive Director of the organization, and in March of 2021, became the permanent co-Executive Director.

Her voting rights work over the last decade at SCSJ has been focused on fighting for fair redistricting plans, fighting against voter suppression, and advocating for electoral reforms that would expand access to voting.

She has litigated redistricting cases on behalf of State NAACP Conferences in Texas, Florida, Virginia and North Carolina. In 2018, she argued the Texas redistricting case in the United States Supreme Court, and in 2019, she argued the North Carolina partisan gerrymandering case in the Supreme Court.  Allison works closely with grassroots organizations and communities of color as they seek to advance their political and civil rights.  She received her undergraduate, Master’s Degree and J.D. from the University of Florida.

Jeff Loperfido

Senior Counsel, Voting Rights
jeffloperfido@scsj.org

Jeff Loperfido serves as Senior Counsel with SCSJ’s Voting Rights group. His practice focuses on litigation and policy advocacy that ensures the fair and full participation of all voters.

Jeff graduated with honors from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a B.S. in Business Administration and a B.A. in Economics, and earned his J.D. cum laude from the University of Pennsylvania Law School. Following law school, he served as a law clerk to the Hon. Norma L. Shapiro, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, and then worked in private practice for five years at the New York City law firm Cahill Gordon & Reindel LLP. In 2015, he shifted his practice to government work, serving as senior counsel in the Special Federal Litigation Division of the New York City Law Department. Jeff returned to North Carolina in 2017 committed to dedicating his future professional efforts to social justice causes and is excited to have found that opportunity at SCSJ.

Southern Coalition for Social Justice

Southern Coalition for Social Justice

Partnering with communities of color and economically disadvantaged communities in the south to defend and advance their political, social and economic rights through the combination of legal advocacy, research, organizing and communications.

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Voting Rights Organizations Seek Preliminary Injunction to Guarantee Voter Safety in November

Durham, N.C. — On behalf of Democracy North Carolina, the League of Women Voters of North Carolina and eight individual voters, the Southern Coalition for Social Justice, Fair Elections Center and pro bono counsel from law firm WilmerHale have formally requested that a federal court temporarily amend some of the state’s voting laws to guarantee that North Carolinians can vote safely in November’s general election in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

June 5, 2020 by Staff Focus Area: Voting Rights

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 5, 2020

For media inquiries:
Michelle Rash (SCSJ)
336-553-1733 (office)
336-823-5501 (mobile)


Rich Robinson (FEC)
202-696-3406 (mobile)

Durham, N.C. — On behalf of Democracy North Carolina, the League of Women Voters of North Carolina and eight individual voters, the Southern Coalition for Social Justice, Fair Elections Center and pro bono counsel from law firm WilmerHale have formally requested that a federal court temporarily amend some of the state’s voting laws to guarantee that North Carolinians can vote safely in November’s general election in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In a memo and accompanying witness statements filed this morning in the U.S. Middle District of North Carolina, the plaintiffs in Democracy North Carolina et al vs North Carolina State Board of Elections et al outline the likely chance of a high rate of COVID-19 in October and November and the challenge that could create for both vote-by-mail and in-person voting.

“If this Court does not relax the state’s unconstitutionally burdensome registration and voting requirements for mail-in absentee and in-person voting—relief that the Plaintiffs request solely for the November 2020 general election—Plaintiffs and countless North Carolina voters will not be able to vote in that election, or will have to choose between foregoing this right and risking their health and the health of family members,” the memo states.

The memo also emphasizes the need for quick action, since many of the voter materials required for November’s elections, such as absentee ballots, are typically prepared and printed in June.

Among the specific actions requested by the Plaintiffs are:

  • Waiving the requirement that voter registration applications be submitted at least 25 days before the election, changing it instead to the Saturday before.
  • Making it easier to request and submit an absentee ballot, including waiving the witness requirement and allowing absentee ballots to be requested via phone, email or online.
  • Creating a process for absentee ballots to be submitted in a manner other than by mail, such as contactless drop boxes where they could be delivered.
  • Making in-person voting safer, including loosening restrictions on poll worker recruitment, creating greater flexibility in early voting sites and providing personal protective equipment to all precinct workers.

“To guarantee election integrity, we need to make sure all eligible voters have the chance to make their voices heard in November,” said Allison Riggs, Chief Counsel for Voting Rights and Interim Executive Director of the Southern Coalition for Social Justice. “Since the North Carolina General Assembly has failed to act swiftly to address the concerns raised around creating a safe voting environment in November, we are asking the Court to take the action needed. No voter should have to risk their health to cast their ballot, regardless of what manner of voting they choose.”

“Given the dangers posed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the time to step up and protect voters is now,” said Fair Elections Center Senior Counsel Jon Sherman. “Making elderly voters and those with compromised immune systems choose between their health and making their voices heard in an election is undemocratic. No matter how a voter chooses to vote, the process should be safe and fair.”

COVID BoE Amended Complaint and PI by Tazeen Dhanani on Scribd

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The Southern Coalition for Social Justice, founded in 2007, partners with communities of color and economically disadvantaged communities in the South to defend and advance their political, social, and economic rights through the combination of legal advocacy, research, organizing and communications. Learn more at southerncoalition.org and follow our work on Twitter and Facebook.

Fair Elections Center is a national nonpartisan and non-profit voting rights and election reform organization based in Washington, DC whose mission is to use litigation, public education and advocacy to remove barriers to registration and voting, and to improve election administration.

Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP (WilmerHale) provides legal representation across a comprehensive range of practice areas that are critical to the success of its clients. The law firm’s leading Intellectual Property, Litigation/Controversy, Regulatory and Government Affairs, Securities, and Transactional Departments participate in some of the highest-profile legal and policy matters. With a staunch commitment to public service, the firm is renowned as a leader in pro bono representation. WilmerHale is 1,000 lawyers strong with 13 offices in the United States, Europe and Asia. For more information, please visit
www.wilmerhale.com.

Key Contacts

Allison Riggs, Co-Executive Director / Chief Counsel, Voting Rights
allisonriggs@scsj.org

Jeff Loperfido, Senior Counsel, Voting Rights
jeffloperfido@scsj.org

Category iconPress Release,  Recent News,  Voting Rights

Next Article: SCSJ’s Chief Counsel for Voting Rights and Interim Executive Director Wins 2020 David Carliner Public Interest Award
Previous Article: Voting Rights Organizations File Federal Lawsuit to Ensure North Carolina Holds Fair, Safe Elections in November

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