Statements on Voter Registration Issues
For Immediate
Release:
CONTACTS:
Deb Greenspan, dgreenspan@gloverparkgroup.com,
202-741-5573
Meg Reilly, mreilly@gloverparkgroup.com,
202-292-6975
VOTING RIGHTS EXPERTS STATEMENTS ON VOTER
REGISTRATION ISSUES
Jonah Goldman, Director of the National Campaign for
Fair Elections, Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law's Voting Rights
Project.
In the next three weeks, we must maintain the integrity of the system,
while also working to ensure that anyone who is properly registered is not
intimidated by political operatives questioning their right to vote. We must unmask
voter suppression tactics disguised as voter integrity measures.
The concerns we're
seeing now with voter registration are eminently fixable. We need a system in which registration drives and the crush of new
applications to be processed before Election Day are replaced by a more
standard and logical process. Government should make sure that all citizens
are permanently registered to vote as soon as they become eligible and that
registrations are automatically updated with changes in address and marital
status. This will eliminate the need for community groups or partisans to
conduct voter registration drives and make our government clearly responsible for
maintaining voter rolls throughout the year.
Wendy Weiser,
Democracy Deputy Director, Brennan
Center for Justice.
These attacks
are a diversion from the real problem, which is that hundreds of thousands of
Americans will not have their votes counted this election because of public
policies that prevent them from getting and staying on the voter rolls. Until we have
a standard, automatic voter registration system where every eligible voter is
added to the rolls, voter registration groups will play an important role in helping
register citizens -especially people with lower incomes, minorities, and young
people. We need to make sure that all our elections are free from intimidation,
fraud, and vote suppression. This debate should make clear once and for all
that we need to reform the system so that all eligible Americans are on the
voter rolls, can vote, and have their votes counted.
Tova Wang, Vice President of Research, Common Cause.
It is unfortunate that some
would seek to distract us from the real
work that needs to be done to ensure a fair election in which every eligible
voter can cast a ballot and all the ballots are counted. While there is simply
no evidence of voter impersonation fraud at the polling place there is ample
evidence of real people's votes that may go uncounted due to unfair practices
of voter purging and other vote suppression tactics. Ultimately all this
underscores the need for a system in which the government shoulders its fair
share of the responsibility to ensure that Americans are properly registered
and stay registered.
BACKGROUND:
The good news is that voter
registration groups and election officials are identifying problems and are
resolving them. The current system identified and disqualified the fraction of
voter registration forms that were incorrectly filled out by workers.
Even though Mickey Mouse
never showed up at the polls, the process ensured that he won't appear on the
voter rolls.
The bad news is that the millions of voters who
registered properly through community organizations are now being targeted and
intimidated by partisans attempting to cast a cloud of suspicion. Most of these
new registrants are racial minorities and recently naturalized citizens.
Also troubling is
that in the crush of processing new applications before Election Day, too many
eligible voters are being thrown off the voter rolls by election workers who
are overzealously bureaucratic or motivated by partisanship.
Election Protection
Election Protection is the
nation's largest nonpartisan voter protection coalition, led by the Lawyers'
Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. Through its 1-866-OUR-VOTE Hotline
(1-866-687-8683) and dedicated team of legal experts and trained volunteers,
Election Protection helps all American voters, including traditionally
disenfranchised groups, gain access to the polls and overcome obstacles to
voting, offering live assistance. The coalition has more than 100 partners at
the national, state and local level, and is providing live voter protection
services now through Election Day for all 50 states. For more information about
Election Protection and the 1-866-OUR-VOTE Hotline, please visit: www.866ourvote.org.
The Brennan Center
for Justice
The Brennan Center
for Justice at New York
University School
of Law is a non-partisan public policy and law institute that focuses on
fundamental issues of democracy and justice. Our work ranges from voting rights
to redistricting reform, from access to the courts to presidential power in the
fight against terrorism. A singular institution - part think tank, part public
interest law firm, part advocacy group - the Brennan Center combines
scholarship, legislative and legal advocacy, and communications to win
meaningful, measurable change in the public sector.
Common Cause
Common Cause is a nonpartisan, nonprofit advocacy
organization founded in 1970 by John Gardner as a vehicle for citizens to make
their voices heard in the political process and to hold their elected leaders
accountable to the public interest.
Now with nearly 400,000 members and supporters and 36
state organizations, Common Cause remains committed to honest, open and
accountable government, as well as encouraging citizen participation in
democracy.





