The Oklahoman

Voter registrati­on plummets during COVID-19 pandemic

- By Joey Garrison

WASHINGTON – The registrati­on of new voters dropped dramatical­ly in the USA amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, challengin­g efforts of both major political parties to enlist supporters in battlegrou­nd states before the 2020 election.

The number of new voters registered across 11 states in April 2020 decreased by 70% compared with April 2016, according to a report from the nonpartisa­n Center for Election Innovation & Research released Thursday.

Voter registrati­on was well ahead of the 2016 pace in most states through February. It started to decline in March, when states began enforcing stay-at-home orders and social distancing requiremen­ts to fight the spread of the COVID19 virus.

By April, registrati­on plummeted as the two most popular methods of signing up voters – at schools and other public venues and “motor voter registrati­on” – virtually halted. The latter refers to a federal law that requires states to give individual­s the opportunit­y to register to vote when they apply for or renew a driver's license.

“Other efforts to register voters are going to be more important than ever,” said David Becker, executive director of the Center for Election Innovation & Research. “If we're completely opened up and no one is worried about the virus in September, we're probably going to be OK. But I don't know many people who are really banking on that. I think most public health experts think that we're going to need to be concerned about social distancing and large groups of people for a while.”

States with at least a 50% voter registrati­on reduction from April 2016 include the presidenti­al swing states Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Virginia, North Carolina and Georgia, which Democrats hope to put in play for presumptiv­e nominee Joe Biden. Texas, another state where Democrats hope they can continue to make inroads, and California plummeted by an ever greater 75%.

Voter registrati­on in Illinois, Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia each dropped by more than 50%.

“This is not something that's Democratic or Republican,” Becker said. “Both sides rely on the months leading up to a presidenti­al election to engage with potential new voters and get them registered and hopefully voting. And it's really hard to engage with a voter if you can't get them registered.”

The Texas Tribune reported Engage Texas, a Republican super PAC focused on voter registrati­on in the Lone Star State, shut down because of challenges brought on by the pandemic. The organizati­on launched with $12.7 million in funding, but leaders said they determined the “best use of supporter and donor energies” is to close and phase out personto-person voter registrati­on.

MOVE Texas, which seeks to register young voters, surpassed 2019 registrati­on totals by more than 8,000 before the state's presidenti­al primary March 3, according to Mother Jones magazine.

Then the pandemic hit. “We've gone from registerin­g 2,000 people a week to registerin­g maybe 100,” Drew Galloway, executive director of Move Texas, told Mother Jones. “Voter registrati­on is decimated in Texas.”

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