Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Ill. voter registrati­on delays worry experts

State having problems fulfilling law’s promise

- By Sophia Tareen

CHICAGO — Illinois’ top leaders trumpeted the benefits of automatic voter registrati­on when signing a bipartisan plan in 2017 to change how the state finds and signs up eligible but unregister­ed voters: more civic participat­ion, fewer barriers to the ballot box and modernized systems.

But Illinois hasn’t lived up to its promise, rolling out automatic voter registrati­on far behind schedule and struggling with other changes the law made.

Interest in automatic voter registrati­on has surged since Oregon became the first state to approve it in 2015. Nearly 20 states have approved some form.

But the delays in Illinois, and elsewhere, have elections experts and advocates worried, saying they’ve meant missed opportunit­ies for voters and less time to work out potential problems ahead of 2020. The challenges could offer a glimpse of what’s in store for other states trying out the increasing­ly popular voter reform.

“There are a lot of advocates and community members who thought the bill was signed, a switch was flipped. That we won. In fact, that’s not the case,” said Jay Young of Common Cause Illinois, which backed automatic voter registrati­on. “This is exceptiona­lly frustratin­g.”

Illinois gained national attention in 2017 when then-Gov. Bruce Rauner was among the first Republican governors to support automatic voter registrati­on. The law set a July 2018 deadline for the secretary of state’s office to offer automatic voter registrati­on.

The office was a year late, first offering it in July.

Roadblocks have included old technology and state data that’s not compatible with what’s needed to automatica­lly register to vote: verifying a person is a U.S. citizen, is 18, and has a local address.

Secretary of state officials say they were late because the law tied automatic voter registrati­on to Illinois’ implementa­tion of REAL ID, which also lagged behind schedule. The 2005 law tightening rules for identifica­tion at airports and federal facilities requires applicants to show documents proving U.S. citizenshi­p, making it ideal for automatic voter registrati­on.

“We moved as quickly as the programmin­g would allow,” said Dave Druker, a spokesman for Secretary of State Jesse White. He said the stakes are too high to rush and the office wanted to ensure integrity of voter informatio­n. The agency did overhaul its opt-in voter registrati­on system last summer under the law.

Illinois residents also can still get driver’s licenses that aren’t tied to REAL ID. Those people aren’t automatica­lly registered to vote, and still must “opt in” through a process that’s long been offered and requires proof of age, address and attesting to the fact that one is a U.S. citizen.

Civic interest groups say Illinois still isn’t where it should be and they’re considerin­g legal action. They issued a demand letter in December, with concerns about the rollout and saying the process is cumbersome. They’d hoped to add 1 million new Illinois voters through automatic voter registrati­on over time.

So far, roughly 25,000 have been automatica­lly registered to vote since July. Overall, roughly 600,000 have been registered since July 2018, through all the changes in the law, including new opt-in processes.

Other states have also experience­d delays.

Still, momentum for automatic voter registrati­on grows. Michigan started offering it this year, and Maine approved it in June.

 ??  ?? Bruce Rauner
Bruce Rauner

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