The Morning Call

We must stop lawmakers trying to restrict our vote

- Jacob Winch, a Gen Z voter, is a recent graduate of Tulane University. He wrote this piece for American Forum.

The 2020 election set many records, including for participat­ion by voters of Generation Z, those born between 1997 and 2015.

Nearly 160 million Americans, almost two-thirds of the estimated eligible voter age population, cast their ballots, according to the Pew Research Center.

Any improvemen­t in voting participat­ion is a positive change, but what is particular­ly remarkable about the 2020 election turnout is how many more young people came out, in various ways, to make their voices heard. More than 25 million 18 to 29 year-olds appear to have voted. That is a record 52 to 55% of eligible young voters, showing an increase from the estimated 42 to 44% who voted in 2016.

Traditiona­lly, older Americans vote at higher rates than younger Americans; in 2016, for example, more than 70% of citizens 65 years and older voted, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Likewise, it is seen as traditiona­l that young people vote the least of any age block.

But there is another tradition in American electoral politics that deserves deeper recognitio­n — the consistent attempts to suppress, disenfranc­hise and otherwise reduce the voting rates of particular subsets of U.S. citizens.

Following in this tradition, a number of state legislatur­es (43 so far, including Pennsylvan­ia) around the country have begun pushing bills to actively limit voter participat­ion in the aftermath of the 2020 election.

These restrictiv­e bills are primarily focused on limiting access to mail-in voting, imposing stricter voter identifica­tion requiremen­ts, limiting successful pro-voter registrati­on policies, and enabling more aggressive voter poll purges.

All of these proposed changes may deter young people and minorities from voting (though they will, in effect, burden every voter) and they are inextricab­ly tied to the many unfounded and outright dangerous allegation­s

of fraud that aimed to overthrow the will of the voters this past winter — the same anti-democratic conspiracy theories that led to the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

The Elections Clause (Article I,

Section 4) of the Constituti­on provides the state legislatur­es this power — specifical­ly to prescribe the “Times, Places, and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representa­tives.” But the nature of our democratic republic also provides us, the citizens, with the power to elect those state-level representa­tives.

Millions of young people came out in 2020 — as volunteers, poll workers, notary publics, and first-time voters — to prove to the doubters and nay-sayers that we care about the fate of our country and its people and are committed to civic engagement.

Now those nay-sayers want to leave no room for doubt; they want to make sure we cannot participat­e without jumping through restrictiv­e hoops that do nothing positive for election security.

If you are a younger voter, you need to pay attention to what’s going on in your state legislatur­es.

Elections are neither a one-off event nor an exclusivel­y federal battle. This same fight over who has the necessary access to cast their vote and secure federal representa­tion — a fight that has defined American history — will continue for the rest of our lives. And the main battlegrou­nd will be within the walls of these state legislatur­es that are currently debating the rules to be set for elections in 2022 and 2024.

Gen Z may have the least political experience of all the age groups in America, but we have the greatest potential to transfer our strong and evolving political will into real systemic change. The issues that matter to us most, from climate change to racial justice, require our direct and consistent input in order to create lasting solutions.

Every vote matters, but your vote matters most in elections at the state and local level that have less active participan­ts, especially since it is those elected officials who have the power to decide the rules for our future elections of federal representa­tives.

 ?? MICHELLE LIU/AP 2020 ?? College student Lauren Garner arrives at a South Carolina polling location in November to cast her vote in her first-ever presidenti­al election.
MICHELLE LIU/AP 2020 College student Lauren Garner arrives at a South Carolina polling location in November to cast her vote in her first-ever presidenti­al election.
 ??  ?? Jacob Winch
Jacob Winch

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States