CHARLOTTE — North Carolina’s Republican-led legislature is facing mounting legal battles over its redrawn voter district maps.
Several groups allege they are racially gerrymandered.
And while a number of cases play out in court, there’s a local effort aimed at empowering Black voters at the grassroots level. For the Struggle’s Eatmon Project is launching the Black Ballot Initiative to train election monitors.
[ READ MORE: Redrawn NC voting districts face another lawsuit ]
“There are people who are doing literally everything they can to stop you from voting, right? So no other reason,” said Alesha Brown, the executive director of For the Struggle. “That’s why you should be getting out and vote, you know, getting out the vote. Because at the end of the day, they don’t want you to.”
>> Watch the report from Channel 9′s Madison Carter in the video at the top of the page.
The Eatmon Project is named after Cherisse Eatmon who died in 2020.
“We named our epic project after an incredible young lady named Cherise Eatmon who passed away back in 2020,” Brown said. “But the project is named after her and today is her birthday. So it is really special for us to be able to talk about this initiative and to launch it in her honor.”
(WATCH BELOW: Divine Nine hosts ‘Stroll to the Polls’ to encourage local election voting)
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