Houston Chronicle

COVID-19 could change who turns out in election year.

Pandemic puts drag on voter registrati­ons

- By Michael Wines

WASHINGTON — In a normal election year, volunteers from the Columbus, Ohio, chapter of the League of Women Voters would have spent last weekend at the Columbus Arts Fair, pens and clipboards in hand, looking to sign up new voters among the festival’s 400,000 or so attendees.

This is not a normal election year.

“There are absolutely no festivals this summer,” said Jen Miller, executive director of the league’s state chapter. “We don’t have volunteers at tables. We don’t have volunteers roving with clipboards. Obviously, we’re just not doing that.”

Neither is pretty much anyone else. First, the COVID-19 pandemic upended how people vote, forcing a huge shift to mailed-in ballots in primary elections nationwide. Now it is taking aim at who can vote — the millions of people who would ordinarily register or update their registrati­ons in a presidenti­al election year.

New voter registrati­ons in 12 states and the District of Columbia plummeted 70 percent in April compared to January, before the coronaviru­s became a major public issue, according to a study released Friday by the Center for Election Innovation and Research, a Washington, D.C., nonprofit.

By comparison, the center reported, new registrati­ons in the 12 surveyed jurisdicti­ons rose by 43 percent during the same period in 2016.

In Florida, one likely battlegrou­nd state in November, there were 77,000 new registrati­ons in January; that number fell to 21,000 in April. Another battlegrou­nd state, North Carolina, plunged from 112,000 new voters in January to 35,000 in April. Monthly registrati­ons fell by two-thirds in Arizona and by three-quarters in California.

‘No simple answer’

The drop has the potential to depress participat­ion in a November presidenti­al election that has been widely expected to break all records for turnout, the center’s director, David Becker, said Friday.

“There’s no simple answer to this,” he said. While registrati­ons could rebound as pandemic-induced limits on social interactio­n ease, he said, “we have to go into this with open eyes. This is going to be a big challenge.”

In fact, some signs of a possible rebound have already surfaced at another big source of new registrati­ons: Online services like Vote.org and Rock the Vote have recently seen a surge in visits to their websites, perhaps reflecting renewed civic activism in the wake of the death of George Floyd.

About 200,000 people began online registrati­ons at the Vote.org website in the first week of June; and 107,000 more began signups at Rock the Vote, whose platform is used by a range of civic groups, the heads of those organizati­ons said in interviews last week. Both numbers are unusually high given that there were few or no deadlines for voter registrati­on during the week, the factor that usually causes online sign-ups to increase.

The reasons for the spring declines in new voter registrati­ons are obvious. Driver licensing bureaus and some other state offices, which double as voter registrati­on offices under federal law, were shuttered or only intermitte­ntly open as the pandemic worsened.

Those offices account for a huge share of new registrati­ons. In Florida, for example, new registrati­ons at motor vehicle offices dropped from more than 42,000 in February to fewer than 4,900 in April, Becker said.

Voter registrati­on drives, which sign up droves of voters in election years, have also slowed to a crawl, as the pandemic has made contact with crowds like those at art festivals a health hazard.

In the last major election year, 2018, League of Women Voters chapters registered 225,000 new voters nationwide, a number that would almost certainly rise sharply this year under ordinary conditions. But this month, registrati­on efforts by the league’s 750 affiliates are “probably 95 percent closed compared to what we’ve done in the past,” its director of mission impact, Jeanette Senecal, said.

Some losses may be offset by a consortium of state election offices, the Electronic Registrati­on Informatio­n Center. The center’s primary job is to help states keep their voter rolls up to date by exchanging informatio­n from motor vehicle offices and voter registrati­on lists. But new members also agree to contact all eligible residents who have not registered to vote and invite them to sign up.

This year, six states — Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Michigan, Texas and Vermont — are new members and, along with the other members, will extend invitation­s to more than 20 million potential voters. If 15 percent of them take up the offer, as happened in 2016, the invitation­s alone would add 3 million new voters to the rolls. But given the intense interest in the presidenti­al election, “I expect to see much higher rates,” Becker said.

A secondary concern

There are, of course, many ways to register that are not affected by the pandemic. Beyond civic groups that offer online sign-ups, all but a handful of states offer online registrati­ons via their own websites — if citizens are motivated to find the websites and navigate the sign-up process.

Motor vehicle offices and registrati­on drives remove those roadblocks, which is why they are crucial to increasing the voter rolls.

“We’ve been of the belief that if you ask someone to register and vote, that they will,” said Alexandria Harris, executive director of the Andrew Goodman Foundation, which works to increase voting among young people. “But typically, that’s been in person, at a registrati­on drive, setting up a table.”

Even if the pandemic had not ruled that out, the economic and social upheavals it triggered have relegated voting to a secondary concern for many.

“Eligible voters’ minds have not been on the election — that’s just a reality,” said Carolyn DeWitt, executive director of Rock the Vote. “They’ve been focusing on the loss of jobs, their health, child care at home and so on.”

But slowly, the clipboards and sign-up tables are returning to the public square. During protests over police brutality this month in Houston, volunteers from the local League of Women Voters were in the crowds, recruiting new registrant­s.

“I’m looking forward to the day when we can do this in person again,” Senecal said.

 ?? John Spink / Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on/TNS ?? A report by the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on found that human error, equipment failure and a complicate­d voting system created chaos that left some Georgia voters waiting up to eight hours to cast ballots June 9.
John Spink / Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on/TNS A report by the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on found that human error, equipment failure and a complicate­d voting system created chaos that left some Georgia voters waiting up to eight hours to cast ballots June 9.

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