Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Fight for the Vote 2012 January 2012. 2 Registering [poor people] to vote is like handing out burglary tools to criminals. It is profoundly antisocial.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Fight for the Vote 2012 January 2012. 2 Registering [poor people] to vote is like handing out burglary tools to criminals. It is profoundly antisocial."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Fight for the Vote 2012 January 2012

2 2 Registering [poor people] to vote is like handing out burglary tools to criminals. It is profoundly antisocial and un-American to empower the nonproductive segments of the population to destroy the country — which is precisely why Barack Obama zealously supports registering welfare recipients to vote. Columnist Matthew Vadum

3 3 “Voting as a liberal. You know, that’s what kids do. They don’t have experience and just vote their feelings...” New Hampshire House Speaker William O’Brien

4 4 “[T]his endless cheerleading — let’s go to the rock concerts and register the kids... I’m just saying we shouldn’t have these “Get Out The Vote” campaigns and make these statements: “Everyone has to vote. It’s your patriotic duty!” Well if you’re not paying attention, I think it’s your patriotic duty not to vote. John Stossel, Fox News

5 Demographic Shifts 5 From 2011 – 2031, 10,000 people per day will reach 65 years of age. For persons 80 and over, the population growth rate is twice that of those 65 and over and almost 4x that for the total population. Growth rate for populations by ethnicity/race: Hispanic/Latino 43% Black 12% Asian 43% Non-Hispanic White 1.2%

6 Nature and Impact of Voting Restrictions 6

7 New Voting Restrictions 7 Restrictive photo ID: 7 passed, 37 introduced Documentary proof of citizenship: 3 passed, 13 introduced Making voter registration harder:5 passed, 13 introduced Reducing absentee and early voting: 5 passed, 9 introduced Harder to restore voting rights:2 executive actions

8 No-Photo, No-Vote Voter ID Requirements 8 34 states introduced laws to require some form of government-issued photo ID in order to vote. Laws have passed in: AL, KS, MS, RI, SC, TN, TX, WI (Vetoed: MN, MO, MT, NH & NC) Photo ID laws are pending: MN, NH, PA, TN & VA Constitutional Amendment Ballot Measure: MO

9 Proof of Citizenship for Registration 9 13 states introduced laws to require proof of citizenship for purposes of voter registration. Laws have passed in: KS, TN & AL Proof of citizenship laws are pending: SC

10 Rates of Proof of Identity & Citizenship 10 11% of Americans lack photo ID 18% of Americans over 65 lack photo ID 25% of African Americans lack photo ID 18% of young people aged 18 – 24 lack photo ID At least 7% of Americans lack proof of citizenship 34% of women lack proof of citizenship with current legal name

11 Restrictions on Voter Registration 11 Texas and Florida passed legislation starkly restricting third-party voter registration drives with pending laws in South Carolina and Michigan. Additional laws in Wisconsin and Ohio reducing ability of voters to move within counties and remain registered

12 Restrictions on Voter Registration 12 Hundreds of thousands registered through drives in Florida in both 2004 and 2008 African-American and Hispanic voters are twice as likely to register through drives as white voters

13 Restrictions on Access to the Ballot 13 Laws reducing early voting signed into law in five states: FL, GA, OH, TN & WV Elimination of “Golden Week” in Ohio – overlap that allowed same-day registration during the first week of early voting. In- person voting period from 35 days to 11 with Sat afternoon and Sunday eliminated entirely. Elimination of “Souls to the Polls Sunday” in Florida – Sunday before Election Day and reduced early voting period from two weeks to one week.

14 Eliminating Sunday voting: Florida 2008 Hispanic voters 35% 25% 15% 5% African-American voters % of CVAP 25% 15% 5% % of CVAP % voted Sunday before Election Day

15 Making it Harder to Restore Voting Rights 15 Up to 1 million disenfranchised in Florida * 1 in 4 is African American * 150,000 had voting rights restored under Governor Crist’s process Reversal of executive orders automatically restoring voting rights to persons with felony convictions 80,000 had voting rights restored in Iowa under Governor Vilsack’s order

16 Assault on Student Rights 16 Texas and Tennessee: C onceal-carry gun licenses are accepted; student IDs are not accepted New Hampshire: “Voting as a liberal. You know, that’s what kids do. They don’t have experience and just vote their feelings...” Maine: targeting students paying out-of-state tuition or displaced by natural disaster

17 17 79% Source: Voting Law Changes in 2012, Brennan Center for Justice

18 Demographics and Democratic Power 18 Demographic population growth direct proportion to the populations most severely affected by restrictive voting laws With respect to race, redistricting patterns may ultimately demonstrate a reinforcement of these patterns resulting in serious impact on the ability of populations to create and develop effective infrastructure for political engagement.

19 Brennan Center for Justice Voting Rights and Elections Team lawrence.norden@nyu.edu – Deputy Director myrna.perez@nyu.edu – Senior Counsel keesha.gaskins@nyu.edu – Senior Counsel lee.rowland@nyu.edu - Counsel diana.kasdan@nyu.edu - Counsel 19


Download ppt "The Fight for the Vote 2012 January 2012. 2 Registering [poor people] to vote is like handing out burglary tools to criminals. It is profoundly antisocial."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google