JOAQUIN GONZALEZ
Joaquin Gonzalez is a civil rights litigator, law professor, and native San Antonian with deep experience in Texas politics and election and constitutional law.
As a civil rights litigator, Mr. Gonzalez has played a leading role in some of the most significant Texas voting rights cases in recent years. This includes halting an attempt to improperly purge nearly 100,000 naturalized citizens from the voter rolls in 2019 as well as forcing Texas to fully comply with the federal motor voter law, which has led to over 2,000,000 voter registrations. He helped design Bexar County’s S.M.A.R.T. Elections initiative in 2020, which successfully expanded access and ensured safe and effective elections during the COVID pandemic.
One of Mr. Gonzalez’s focus areas has been redistricting. He has served as the redistricting counsel for the Mexican American Legislative Caucus, and recently argued a major Voting Rights Act case in front of the En Banc Fifth Circuit.
Prior to becoming an attorney, Mr. Gonzalez worked in policy and campaign positions for a number of state and local elected officials in Texas.
Mr. Gonzalez holds a J.D. from Yale Law School, where he served as Notes Editor for the Yale Law Journal and Articles Editor on the Yale Journal of Law and Technology. He has an undergraduate degree in Politics and International Relations from the London School of Economics.
Mr. Gonzalez’s publications include:
- Miguel Rivera, Joaquin Gonzalez, Sarah Chen, Report: A Review of Redistricting in Texas, Texas Civil Rights Project (2021).
- Joaquin Gonzalez, Secrecy, Lies, Exclusion: Why Texas Is One of the Most Gerrymandered States, TCRPMag (May 21, 2020).
- Rebecca Harrison Stevens, Meagan Taylor Harding, Joaquin Gonzalez, Emily Eby, Handcuffing the Vote: Diluting Minority Voting Power Through Prison Gerrymandering and Felon Disenfranchisement, 21 Scholar: St. Mary’s L. Rev. & Soc. Just. 195, 196 (2019).
- Joaquin Gonzalez, Fighting Back To Protect Student Voting Rights, 129 Yale L.J. Forum 258 (2019).