Voter registration plummets during COVID-19 pandemic
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.”