Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Views vary on same-day voter sign-up

- Amy Sherman

As Democrats seek to set uniform election policies nationwide to make it easier to cast a ballot, one change on their wish list would allow all Americans to register to vote on Election Day.

Senate Democrats have included a provision in the Freedom to Vote Act, their sweeping voting rights bill, that would require all states to allow sameday registrati­on. Only 20 states currently offer it.

Supporters say that it removes the registrati­on deadline as a barrier to voting and offers people a convenient way to register and vote in one trip. Opponents say it adds work for election officials during their busiest time of year and poses a risk of fraud, though we have debunked that notion.

We wanted to take a closer look at the provisions of the bill, the prevalence of same-day registrati­on, the criticisms of it and how election officials make it work.

The election officials we spoke to acknowledg­ed that same-day registrati­on poses challenges, but generally dismissed the idea that it exposes elections to the risk of fraud.

Bill would ensure registrati­on option at voting site

Elections are largely governed by state laws, but the Freedom to Vote Act would set uniform policies for all federal elections regarding mail-in ballots, early voting and voter registrati­on.

Republican­s have opposed the bill and say that states should continue to set their own election laws. Senate Democrats failed in their bid to advance the voting rights bill on Wednesday, with every Republican voting against moving the bill to the Senate floor for a final vote. A separate vote to change the filibuster rules for the voting rights bill so it could pass with a simple majority of 51 votes also failed.

On voter registrati­on, the legislatio­n says that each state shall allow any eligible individual on the day of a federal election to register at their polling place to vote. That’s a stricter rule than some states with same-day registrati­on observe. Michigan, for example, allows Election Day registrati­on at a local clerk’s office, not at the voter’s polling place.

The National Conference of State Legislatur­es found that 20 states and Washington, D.C., offer some form of same-day registrati­on. They include blue states such as Illinois and Minnesota, red states such as Wyoming and Idaho, and battlegrou­nds including Michigan and Wisconsin. Minnesota, Wisconsin and Maine pioneered sameday registrati­on in the 1970s, and the practice became more common over the past decade.

Montana and North Carolina allow individual­s to register during part of the early voting period, but not on Election Day. In most other states, voters must register by a deadline, generally between eight and 30 days before the election.

State lawmakers have proposed bills within the past few months to create same-day registrati­on in Pennsylvan­ia and Massachuse­tts. Same-day registrati­on is scheduled to start this fall in Virginia, but some proposed bills would reverse that plan. Arizona doesn’t have same-day registrati­on, and a pending bill would prohibit it. New York voters rejected same-day registrati­on in November.

A Morning Consult/Politico poll in January found that 56% of respondent­s support same-day voter registrati­on, but it was far more popular with Democrats (78% support) than Republican­s (35%).

There is evidence that same-day registrati­on increases turnout, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es, but it isn’t clear how much.

Research published by the University of Chicago Press in 2021 found sameday registrati­on increases turnout among individual­s ages 18 to 24 by between 3.1 and 7.3 percentage points. Young people are more likely to move a lot, making same-day registrati­on particular­ly convenient for them. The findings mirror earlier studies.

Same-day voter registrati­on includes validation steps

The Heritage Foundation, a conservati­ve group, says same-day registrati­on “gives election officials no time to verify the accuracy of the voter registrati­on informatio­n and the eligibilit­y of the individual to vote.”

But states that offer same-day registrati­on do have systems to verify eligibilit­y, including requiring the prospectiv­e voter to present proof of residency. The rules about acceptable forms of ID beyond a driver’s license vary, with some states allowing prospectiv­e voters to use a paycheck or utility bill.

Many states require same-day registrant­s to sign an affidavit stating they have not already voted and if they do double vote, they face criminal penalties.

“We have clear evidence that sameday registrati­on is feasible to implement, makes it easier for people to access a constituti­onal right and does not reduce the integrity of elections,” said Georgetown University public-policy professor Donald Moynihan.

Wisconsin survey

In a survey of Wisconsin election clerks published in a report by Pew Charitable Trusts in 2009, researcher­s at the University of Wisconsin-Madison found that the majority of election officials said that same-day registrati­on increases their administra­tive burdens but that the benefits outweighed the costs.

Local elections officials in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan told us that same-day registrati­on requires some steps by their officials, but they didn’t describe it as a difficult hurdle.

“Think about the population you serve; it’s really the more efficient way to serve them rather than an arbitrary long date ahead of an election during which you have to register people,” said Andy Lokken, elections director in Dakota County, Minnesota.

As a security measure, Minnesotan­s who newly register to vote are mailed a non-forwardabl­e verification card. If the card for a voter who registered on Election Day is returned as undelivera­ble, officials follow up to verify the voter’s eligibilit­y. If it doesn’t check out, they can refer the case to the county attorney for investigat­ion and possible felony prosecutio­n, said Paul Linnell, elections manager in Anoka County, in suburban Minneapoli­s.

Election officials in Minnesota told us they had seen a decline over the past decade in same-day registrati­on due to the growth of online voter registrati­on. For example in Anoka County, 18% of voters used Election Day registrati­on in 2008 but only 8% in 2020.

In Michigan, voters in 2018 overwhelmi­ngly passed Proposal 3, which amended the state constituti­on to guarantee access to no-excuse absentee voting and same-day voter registrati­on. Michigan voters can’t register at their local polling place on Election Day, but they can register at the local clerk’s office and receive a ballot there. Or they can take a signed registrati­on receipt to their polling place to cast their ballot.

The new process led to long lines at clerks’ offices in college towns in March 2020, when Michigan held its presidenti­al primary. But following public awareness efforts, new registrati­ons leading to the November election were more spread out, with fewer on Election Day itself, said Lawrence Kestenbaum, the Democratic clerk in Washtenaw County.

“We don’t believe that Election Day registrati­on undermined trust in Michigan elections at all,” said Kestenbuam. “I’m not hearing complaints about the security of the process.”

Justin Roebuck, the Republican clerk of Ottawa County, a GOP stronghold in western Michigan, said that for Michigan, it made sense to put the responsibi­lity of registrati­on on clerks at their offices, rather than at the polling places.

“It has largely been a huge success, both in terms of allowing access for voters and as a secure system that prevents fraud,” Roebuck said.

Voter fraud is rare

Critics of same-day registrati­on continuall­y raise the specter of the double voter who votes in one place on Election Day, registers in another place with some form of identification and then votes again. While that could conceivabl­y happen, officials and experts say, it almost never does.

It’s highly unlikely that someone will engage in voter fraud through same-day registrati­on because the risk of detection is high, said Moynihan, the Georgetown professor.

Same-day registrati­on “requires an individual to come to a polling place and verify that they are who they say they are and they are a resident of the area” and do that under the supervisio­n of a public official, Moynihan said.

In Michigan, voters’ informatio­n is entered into a statewide database, most commonly using their driver license or state ID number, which will bring up records of any previous registrati­on. A person who tried to register in two different places on Election Day would be flagged.

In general, cases of suspected voter fraud are exceedingl­y rare, and prosecutio­ns even more so. The Associated Press reported in December that it found 475 potential cases of voter fraud in six battlegrou­nd states in 2020 out of about 25.5 million votes cast. Nearly a third of those were from an investigat­ion in Pima County, Arizona, where the county attorney announced in January that zero cases warranted prosecutio­n.

Sara Bruckman, currently deputy clerk treasurer of the village of Fox Point, Wisconsin, said in her eight years as an election official in the state, she could recall only one case where a voter cast a ballot, then used same-day registrati­on with a different address and cast another ballot.

“We caught it within the next day,” Bruckman said.

 ?? MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL FILES ?? Eric Johnson, of Milwaukee, gets assistance with registerin­g to vote from Terry Perry at the Central Milwaukee Public Library.
MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL FILES Eric Johnson, of Milwaukee, gets assistance with registerin­g to vote from Terry Perry at the Central Milwaukee Public Library.

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