Chicago Sun-Times

Secretary of State’s office vows to stop letting 16-year-olds submit forms to register to vote

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

First it was non-citizens, and now it’s 16-year-olds.

In the latest snafu over voter registrati­on, Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White’s office allowed at least 4,700 16-year-olds to begin the voter registrati­on process.

Although state law does allow 17-year-olds to vote in the primary as long as they turn 18 by the next general election, there’s no learners’ permit for 16-year-olds.

“There’s no getting around that,” Matt Dietrich, spokesman for the Illinois State Board of Elections told the Daily Line, which first reported the gaffe.

Dietrich said 16-yearolds likely began the registrati­on process when they went to get their drivers’ licenses. Those applicatio­ns were forwarded from the secretary of state’s office with the intention that the applicatio­n could then be held by a local election authority, Dietrich said.

“I think they thought this was a courtesy to applicants, but there is no process for local election authoritie­s to hold applicatio­ns [until someone is old enough to vote],” Dietrich told the Chicago SunTimes. “[The secretary of state’s office] said they’ll stop.”

Dietrich’s office sent out 4,700 letters to would-be voters, telling them that, after a review of their applicatio­n, “we have determined that you do not meet the requiremen­t to be eighteen years of age by the date of the next general or consolidat­ed election.”

As a result, those applicatio­ns were terminated — meaning no 16 year olds were actually registered to vote.

Dave Druker, spokesman for the secretary of state’s office, said forwarding the applicatio­ns was something the office had done “for awhile” and said a “difference of opinion” on the law that allows 17-year-olds to register could explain why the applicatio­ns were sent along.

Sixteen-year-olds starting the voter registrati­on process is the latest problem related to the automatic voter registrati­on program.

Last week, Republican lawmakers sent a letter to Democratic House Speaker Mike Madigan, demanding answers from White about how 545 self-identified nonU.S. citizens were mistakenly registered to vote through the state’s new automatic registrati­on system.

The Illinois Board of Elections said as many as 14 non-citizens appear to have cast ballots in elections, and Gov. J.B. Pritzker joined those calling for an investigat­ion.

Responding to the noncitizen registrati­on mishap, the state’s election board sent the names of 124 people to the city election board Dec. 30 — and those people had their voter registrati­ons canceled that day, Jim Allen, spokesman for the Chicago Board of Election Commission­ers, said Monday.

Of that number, 118 had never voted. Four voted before the automatic voter registrati­on system was put in place. Only two noncitizen­s in the city cast ballots, Allen said: one in November 2018, the other in April 2019.

The non-citizen registrati­ons have prompted calls to pause the automatic registrati­on program.

But Pritzker dismissed those concerns earlier this week, telling reporters, “The glitch has been fixed.”

Dietrich also pushed back on the need to suspend the program, arguing it’s meant more people getting involved in the voting process — 698,800 actual registrati­ons completed thanks to the program.

Druker also didn’t see a need for a pause, saying the two issues are different and the office takes responsibi­lity for non-citizens being registered and took action to notify people and make sure the mistake wouldn’t be repeated.

 ??  ?? Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White
Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White

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