Lodi News-Sentinel

1 in 8 Iowans targeted for an eventual purge under first voting curbs of 2021

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Iowa is already seeing the effects of the year’s first Republican-driven curbs on voting. The state’s elections administra­tor has told 294,000 Iowans they’ve been targeted for an eventual purge from the registrati­on list — simply because they did not vote last year.

GOP Secretary of State Paul Pate’s office revealed this week that postcards have been mailed to more than 13% of the state’s electorate telling them they are “inactive” voters because they did not cast any ballot in 2020. The list includes about 400 teenagers who were allowed to register even though they turned 18 after Election Day.

Pate was required to act under the sweeping tightening of election rules approved by the Republican-controlled General Assembly in February, despite united Democratic opposition. Like fellow Republican­s nationwide, the GOP acted in the name of preventing the sort of election cheating that Democrats accurately describe as almost non-existent.

Keeping voter rolls up to date enjoys bipartisan support as a good-government best practice, but Republican­s generally want to move much more aggressive­ly than Democrats — who say the risk of fraud is much less than the risk that eligible voters will get purged.

Previously, voters had to miss two consecutiv­e general elections to be moved to inactive status. That designatio­n does not immediatel­y limit the ability to vote, but instead puts the Iowan on notice their registrati­on will be canceled if they remain politicall­y silent through 2024. Requesting an absentee ballot, voting in any election or re-registerin­g at a new address will restore an Iowan’s active voter status.

“Incorrectl­y inactivati­ng voters is a chill to voters across the state,” said Linn County Auditor Joel Miller, a Democrat considerin­g a challenge to Pate’s reelection next year. “It sows distrust and uncertaint­y while also discouragi­ng voters from voting.”

The new law is in some ways more restrictiv­e than the one in Georgia, which has gained much more notoriety because the Peach State is a newly purple presidenti­al battlegrou­nd — and both civil rights groups and some big companies have derided the effort as all about suppressin­g the vote of the one-third of Georgians who are Black.

 ?? MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES ?? A voter marks his ballot at a polling place in Dennis Wilkening’s shed on Nov. 3, 2020 in Richland, Iowa.
MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES A voter marks his ballot at a polling place in Dennis Wilkening’s shed on Nov. 3, 2020 in Richland, Iowa.

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