Santa Fe New Mexican

GOP doesn’t trust voters

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President Donald Trump tweeted triumphant­ly on Monday, “Just won big Supreme Court decision on Voting! Great News!” The great news in his book is a 5-4 decision allowing Ohio to remove people from the voting rolls who haven’t voted in every election. Specifical­ly, if they haven’t voted in two years, they get a postcard in the mail, and if they don’t respond, they have four more years to vote. Then they are taken off the rolls.

What if they throw away the postcard thinking it is junk mail? Too bad. What if for six years they cannot find someone worth voting for? Too bad. Off they go. You would think the Trump administra­tion and the five conservati­ve justices didn’t want just anyone who wishes to vote to be allowed to do so.

In the majority opinion, Justice Samuel Alito found that the prohibitio­n against removing people from the voting rolls for failure to vote didn’t apply because they could remain on the rolls just by sending back the postcard. And if it got lost in the mail or misdirecte­d or forgotten? Alito thinks it’s fine to take away the fundamenta­l right to vote.

In dissent, Justice Stephen Breyer expressed some amazement at the majority’s cavalier treatment of the right to vote. Breyer argued that Ohio failed to satisfy the statute requiring “administra­tion of voter registrati­on for elections for Federal office” because it had erected “needless hurdles to voting of the kind Congress sought to eliminate.” He explains:

“In identifyin­g registered voters who have likely changed residences by looking to see if those registrant­s failed to vote, Ohio’s program violates subsection (b)’s express prohibitio­n on ‘[a]ny State program or activity [that] result[s] in the removal’ of a registered voter ‘by reason of the person’s failure to vote.’ §20507(b)(2) . ... In my view, these words are most naturally read to prohibit a State from considerin­g a registrant’s failure to vote as part of any process ‘that is used to start, or has the effect of starting, a purge of the voter rolls.’ ” H.R. Rep. No. 103-9, at 15. In addition, Congress enacted the Failure-to-Vote Clause to prohibit ‘the eliminatio­n of names of voters from the rolls solely due to [a registrant’s] failure to respond to a mailing.’ Ibid. But that is precisely what Ohio’s Supplement­al Process does.”

The American Civil Liberties Union blasted the decision to remove voters, noting “countless voters, including homeless and housing-insecure Ohioans, have already been stripped of their rights as a result of Ohio’s unjust and an illogical purge process.” Indeed, the next round of litigation may well follow the model of voter-ID litigation, in which the matter at issue is the discrimina­tory effect that an otherwise neutral rule might have. The ACLU vowed that “the court’s decision will not hinder our current and future advocacy efforts. Marginaliz­ed population­s remain extremely vulnerable to state-sanctioned voter suppressio­n and disenfranc­hisement, and we will continue to fight to uphold the rights of eligible voters in the 2018 midterm elections, and beyond.”

Let’s take a step back from the legal arguments for a moment. As the Republican Party narrows its appeal to white voters and fans the flames of white grievance, it is becoming less attractive to everyone else. Rather than broaden its appeal, the party increasing­ly seeks to narrow the electorate in ways that, by gosh, just happen to decrease minority participat­ion. The strategy reveals a party’s lack of self-confidence and in democracy itself. When the president celebrates depriving people of the right to vote, something is seriously amiss.

There is a solution (other than a statutory amendment): a full-out, no-holds-barred effort to register every eligible voter. Some states are passing automatic registrati­on. Florida has a ballot measure to restore voting rights to those who have fully served their criminal sentences. I’d add two more suggestion­s: First, instead of running vanity ads, wealthy donors should commit to registerin­g millions of voters. Second, the Democratic National Committee should for the foreseeabl­e future use its resources primarily for voter registrati­on. If there is a better use of the DNC’s money, I’ve yet to find it.

Sadly, I direct these suggestion­s to Democrats because Republican­s have made it clear that they want a smaller, whiter electorate. It is morally repugnant and violates our democratic principles, but it can no longer be doubted. Hence, the job of expanding democracy for now rests with one party and any independen­t organizati­ons or individual­s committed to the basic principle that the people — not just likely Republican voters — rule.

 ??  ?? Jennifer Rubin Washington Post
Jennifer Rubin Washington Post

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