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    Vetoes, Souls and Stalls: War on Voting Update

    Monday, June 20th, 2011

    Another week has come and gone and state legislatures across the country are still coming to terms with their made-up (voter) identity crisis. We are thick in the battle to make voters prove their identities at the polls with a very narrow list of acceptable IDs. Last week, we saw governors vetoing bills, new laws enacted, and plenty of stalling.

    Here are updates from the individual states:

    Missouri: The most surprising news from the war on voting emerged from an office in Jefferson City, where Governor Jay Nixon vetoed legislation that would have established a photo ID requirement in 2013. The Governor, who had not taken a public stance on the legislature, vetoed the bill, stating: “Disenfranchising certain classes of persons is not acceptable.” You go, Governor Nixon!

    Missouri voters will still vote on a constitutional amendment to allow photo ID legislation in 2012, but the bill establishing such a requirement will not go into immediate effect thanks to this veto. If the voters approve a change to the constitution – which is required because the state Supreme Court ruled that previous photo ID laws violated the state’s constitution – the legislature will have to pass a new law enacting a photo ID requirement.

    You can read Governor Nixon’s full veto statement here.

    North Carolina: There is good news, or slightly less bad news, from North Carolina’s legislature. The election “reform” bill I mentioned last week, SB 47, was amended to delete the provision of eliminating Sunday voting. Hallelujah! “Souls to the Polls” has been saved. The bill is heading back to Committee for further consideration next month.

    The photo ID bill is still waiting for the Governor’s signature, but with the Governor outspoken about maintaining voter rights and increasing participation rates, chances for a veto are promising. When asked about the voter ID bill on Friday afternoon, Governor Perdue said: “I will not go backwards on rights to vote. I need to read their legislation and think about it, but North Carolina is a state that’s very proud of the fact that we have increased voter participation over the past decade, and for us to go backwards on this as well as education is the wrong thing for North Carolina.”

    Maine: After 38 years of Maine voters enjoying the ability to register and cast their ballot on Election Day, both the House and Senate passed a repeal eliminating Same Day Registration. Governor Paul LePage is expected to sign the bill, so the state that first lead the nation in offering Same Day Registration in 1973 reverts to a 21-day voter registration deadline before elections.

    Not all residents are taking the repeal lightly, and are turning to less official routes to garner publicity. The Same Day Registration in Maine Facebook page can by found here. Go Like it.

    On a slightly brighter note, Maine’s Senate voted down the photo ID bill, and it was sent back to a House committee. We’ll keep you posted if the bill makes an insidious reappearance in the Senate.

    Pennsylvania: Pennsylvanian Republicans have not yet brought up the photo ID bill for a vote in the state House just yet. It’s allegedly coming up for a vote early this week, but be on the look out for amendments expanding the types of photo ID allowed. Fun fact: In addition to preventing thousands of citizens from voting, this bill would cost Pennsylvania taxpayers an estimated $11 million to implement, at a time when the state is facing potentially devastating cuts to social services and education.

    Carry on.

    Becca Ward
    Bio: Duke University, Class of 2012 Majoring in Public Policy, Certificate in Energy and the Environment From Portland, Oregon.  Aquarius
    @BeccawkWard
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Restoring Cynicism in North Carolina

    Thursday, June 16th, 2011

    The North Carolina General Assembly has passed the laughably named “Restore Confidence in Government Act” voter ID bill. The legislation would require voters to show government-issued photo ID before casting their ballots and force 460,000 currently registered voters without an approved form of ID to devote needless time and expense to exercise their right to vote.

    With this bill, I do feel more confident than ever . . . that fewer people will be able to vote for the public servants that are supposed to represent their values and their communities. Fortunately, my cynicism about political motives has been completely restored.

    The legislation has been whisked off to the Governor’s desk. She is expected to veto the bill.

    As if some North Carolina politicians weren’t satisfied with the disenfranchisement of seniors, poor people, minorities, young voters, and people with disabilities through their restrictive photo ID bill, another terrible bill should reach the House sometime today.

    Senate Bill 47, pumped up on suppression steroids, is an attempt to repeal Same Day Registration, ban straight-ticket voting, shorten the early-voting period by a week, and ban early voting on Sundays (the much-beloved “souls to the polls”!). This one looks like it is on the fast track to the Governor’s desk, too.

    When you break these bills down, there are serious effects for any voter not able to immediately produce photo ID, take time off work or school, and drive themselves to the poll on a Tuesday. In North Carolina, 2.6 million citizens used early voting to vote before Election Day in 2008. The bill would cut the 16-day early voting period back a week. If the deadline for voter registration slipped by, you will not be able to register the day you vote, a service used by 253,000 voters in 2008.

    This bill, if passed, could be just as damaging as the photo ID bill. This legislation would change voting from your constitutional right to a hassling privilege. And though we expect the Governor to veto this bill, too, you just never know what will happen.

    TAKE ACTION: Tell Governor Perdue to veto these bills today.

    Becca Ward
    Bio: Duke University, Class of 2012 Majoring in Public Policy, Certificate in Energy and the Environment From Portland, Oregon.  Aquarius
    @BeccawkWard
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    Last week’s causalities in the war on voting

    Monday, June 13th, 2011

    Last week was a bleak one for voters across the nation. To top it all off Rock the Vote released a state-by-state scorecard that revealed states aren’t doing that great to begin with and are already failing young voters in a host of ways. Going backwards is not the right direction.

    Here are some updates from the states.

    Maine: Lawmakers are making a series of significant changes in the voting system. A bill to end Same Day Registration and ban absentee voting two business days before the election (LD 1376) passed both the House and the Senate. Politicians pushing the ban on Same Day Registration and absentee voting say it will ease the burdens on the clerks responsible for registering voters on Election Day. These guys believe the most important people in a democracy are the voters clerks. The problem: the clerks actually responsible for running elections embrace Same Day Registration and are worried about disenfranchising voters by eliminating it. The amount of people this change will affect is huge: in 2010, 20,000 people registered to vote on Election Day; in 2010, it was 50,000.

    In addition, the state House passed a bill requiring voters to show a government-issued ID at the polls by a vote of 75-69. The Senate hasn’t voted on the measure yet.

    One good thing did come out of this: an awesome editorial cartoon.

    Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania’s State House will soon vote on – and likely pass – a proposal (House Bill 934) to force voters to show photo identification every time they go to the polls. We know that this new law will just make it harder for groups of voters – namely students, seniors, and low-income people – to vote. Because the state would be required to provide “free” IDs to anyone who doesn’t have one, the law will cost taxpayers more than $10 million to implement in the first year. Pennsylvania is in a budget crisis – including facing $625 million in cuts to higher education and college aid – but politicians want to spend your money to make it harder for people to vote.

    These costs are being imposed on the citizens of Pennsylvania on the tenuous claim that it will reduce voter fraud, but Pennsylvania doesn’t have a problem with voter fraud. In fact, the Pennsylvania Association of County Commissioners has testified that there is no evidence of a problem with fraudulent voting.

    Enjoy some more reading on the subject.

    Minnesota: Gov. Mark Dayton vetoed legislation that would require a photo ID at the poll, but supporters of the measure are pushing to amend the state constitution to impose the law and hope to put a constitutional amendment on the ballot in 2012.

    New Hampshire: The state House and Senate passed legislation requiring photo ID at the polls. There is still the possibility of a veto as the legislation heads to Governor John Lynch, who does not believe “there should be roadblocks at the voting booth.” The vote in the Senate was 14 to 9, so supporters of photo ID may have a hard time overriding the governor’s veto.

    North Carolina: The state House passed a strict photo ID bill by a party-line vote of 66 to 48. Governor Beverly Perdue has expressed concern about the legislation and may veto it when the Senate passes the bill, as it is expected to do. It is estimated that 460,000 currently registered North Carolina voters don’t have the required ID.

    If you want to fight back in the war on voting, go to our Don’t Block the Vote campaign.

    Becca Ward
    Bio: Duke University, Class of 2012 Majoring in Public Policy, Certificate in Energy and the Environment From Portland, Oregon.  Aquarius
    @BeccawkWard
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    NYT: They Want to Make Voting Harder?

    Monday, June 6th, 2011

    As states continue to pass laws that make it harder for people to vote, the New York Times published an editorial today that spotlights some of the regressive actions, especially on the early voting front, and questions the motives of those pushing it.

    Programmers note: On Wednesday, Rock the Vote is releasing the first-ever comprehensive assessment of the nation’s voting system and how well it serves the next generation of Millennial voters. Our Voting System Scorecard serves as a national benchmark that measures states’ laws and policies in three key areas: (1) voter registration, (2) casting a ballot and (3) young voter preparation. We will continue to push states to make the electoral process more accessible for young voters.

    In the meantime, you should read the New York Times editorial, entitled “They Want to Make Voting Harder?” Here it is in full:

    One of the most promising recent trends in expanding political participation has been allowing people to vote in the weeks before Election Day, either in person or by mail. Early voting, which enables people to skip long lines and vote at more convenient times, has been increasingly popular over the last 15 years. It skyrocketed to a third of the vote in 2008, rising particularly in the South and among black voters supporting Barack Obama.

    And that, of course, is why Republican lawmakers in the South are trying desperately to cut it back. Two states in the region have already reduced early-voting periods, and lawmakers in others are considering doing so. It is the latest element of a well-coordinated effort by Republican state legislators across the country to disenfranchise voters who tend to support Democrats, particularly minorities and young people.

    The biggest part of that effort, imposing cumbersome requirements that voters have a government ID, has been painted as a response to voter fraud, an essentially nonexistent problem. But Republican lawmakers also have taken a good look at voting patterns, realized that early voting might have played a role in Mr. Obama’s 2008 victory, and now want to reduce that possibility in 2012.

    Mr. Obama won North Carolina, for example, by less than 15,000 votes. That state has had early voting since 2000, and in 2008, more ballots were cast before Election Day than on it. Mr. Obama won those early votes by a comfortable margin. So it is no coincidence that the North Carolina House passed a measure — along party lines — that would cut the early voting period by a week, reducing it to a week and a half before the election. The Senate is preparing a similar bill, which we hope Gov. Beverly Perdue, a Democrat, will veto if it reaches her.

    Republicans said the measure would save money, a claim as phony as saying widespread fraud necessitates ID cards. The North Carolina elections board, and many county boards, said it would actually cost more money, because they would have to open more voting sites and have less flexibility allocating staff members. Black lawmakers called it what it is: a modern whiff of Jim Crow.

    More than half of the state’s black votes were cast before Election Day, compared with 40 percent of the white votes. A similar trend was evident elsewhere in the South, according to studies by the Early Voting Information Center, a nonpartisan academic center at Reed College in Oregon. Blacks voting early in the South jumped from about 13 percent in 2004 to 33 percent in 2008, according to the studies, significantly outpacing the percentage of whites.

    One of the biggest jumps was in Georgia, where, over the objections of several black lawmakers, the Republican-dominated Legislature passed a bill in April that would cut back in-person early voting to 21 days, from 45 days. Florida just cut its early voting period to eight days, from 14. Florida also eliminated the Sunday before Election Day as an early-voting day; election experts note that will eliminate the practice of many African-Americans of voting directly after going to church.

    Outside the region, the Republican-dominated Legislature in Ohio, a perennial battleground state, is about to restrict early voting, a move that Democrats say amounts to voter suppression and discrimination.

    Thirty-three states and the District of Columbia now allow some form of early voting, a relic from the days when everyone seemed to agree that more voters were better for democracy. Republicans have recently decided that a larger electorate can hurt them.

    What do you think?

    Thomas Bates
    Bio: Thomas is Rock the Vote's Vice President of Civic Engagement.
    @BatesThomas
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com



    A New Low in North Carolina

    Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

    Three North Carolina state Senators have taken aim at the “mom and apple pie” of voter registration policies. Apparently their bill to ban videos of cute kittens on YouTube is still in the works.

    The bill introduced yesterday would eliminate Same Day Registration, a sensible and well-used policy that allows people to register to vote or update their voter registration at early voting sites and then immediately cast their ballot.

    About 250,000 North Carolinians used Same Day Registration in 2008, and it serves as a great fail-safe for voters who move, don’t appear on the rolls due to clerical errors, or have missed the arbitrary mail-in voter registration deadline.

    Fun fact: the states with Same Day Registration have the highest voter turnout rates in the country. In fact, they historically have turnout that is 10 to 12 percentage points higher than those without it. North Carolina saw a sharp rise in voter turnout after Same Day Registration was implemented in 2007.

    Naturally, this must be stopped.

    Second, this bill would end “pre-registration” in North Carolina. Can you imagine anything more insidious or evil than allowing 16 and 17 year-olds to register to vote and then automatically activating their voter status when they turn 18? Neither can the sponsors of this bill. Like Same Day Registration, pre-registration has been shown to be an effective way to increase youth turnout. The horror.

    Are there a few other gems in this bill? You bet! It would ban voting on Sunday in North Carolina (no more “souls to the polls” after church). And it would shorten the early voting period and limit the hours that early voting locations are open.

    Couple this legislation with a bill that would require all voters to show a government-issued photo ID at the polls – including the 500,000 currently registered North Carolina voters and tens of thousands of students who don’t have one of the types of ID cards the new law would require – and I’m starting to think that there are some politicians who want to make it harder for people to vote.

    By the way, last week, Governor Brian Schweitzer of Montana vetoed a bill that would have eliminated Same Day Registration in his state. He did it with a branding iron. It was sweet and caputred on video.

    Unfortunately, we are seeing threats to Same Day Registration in other states, including in Wisconsin and Maine. It is a war on voting, gang. Click here to join the fight to stop it.

    Thomas Bates
    Bio: Thomas is Rock the Vote's Vice President of Civic Engagement.
    @BatesThomas
    Email the author at: blog(at)rockthevote.com