The Guardian (USA)

Mail-in voting will suppress Native Americans’ votes in November

- Thea Sebastian

Native communitie­s have spent centuries battling for voting rights. Indigeneou­s Americans couldn’t formally vote in every state until 1957, more than three decades after securing full US citizenshi­p.

The campaign against this community persists, including discrimina­tory policies like voter ID laws and lack of polling locations on reservatio­ns. But this November, as lawmakers adapt voting to the Covid-19 pandemic, Native voters face a new hurdle: the reforms that best balance public health and democratic access will disproport­ionately suppress Native voting. Especially when it comes to vote-by-mail.

Households on Native American reservatio­ns, like many households in rural America, disproport­ionately lack mail delivery. In Arizona, only 18% of Native Americans receive mail at home – white voters have a rate that is 350% higher. As Elouise Brown, a Navajo activist and grazing officer, said bluntly: “This vote-by-mail is not going to work.

Not for us.”

Lacking home delivery, many Native families rely on PO boxes. Even then, though, logistical barriers abound. Rural post offices often have truncated hours and require substantia­l travel. Some Navajo nation residents trek 140 miles to access postal services, traveling on roads that are frequently unpaved or only passable during early morning when mud is frozen. And due to high costs and limited availabili­ty, multiple families routinely share a single PO box.

These issues complicate vote-bymail procedures. In many states, election officials will not send mail ballots to PO boxes or shared PO boxes. Meanwhile, the vagaries of rural mail – a problem exacerbate­d by Covid-19 – mean that envelopes are often delayed. Even a timely ballot may reach its destinatio­n late, though the voter did nothing wrong.

Extreme poverty adds another layer of complexity. A quarter of Native Americans are poor, with poverty rates approachin­g 40% on many reservatio­ns. In South Dakota, 51% of Native Americans fall below the poverty line. Housing instabilit­y is common, forcing multiple families to share a residence, and some states don’t send ballots to households with more than one nuclear family.

Paula Antoine, a Rosebud Sioux member who lives with 11 family mem

bers, says that “because there aren’t enough houses, many families double or triple up”. Housing instabilit­y also means that many people lack reliable addresses to submit.

Meanwhile, 90% of reservatio­ns lack broadband internet access. Without broadband, many voters can’t register online to receive ballots. Moreover, families without internet and cell service may face difficulti­es gathering basic informatio­n.

Indigenous communitie­s, given their revenue streams, have proven particular­ly vulnerable to Covid-19 economic devastatio­n. Consequent­ly, Native voters may find themselves disproport­ionately disenfranc­hised by policies that make people with prior felony conviction­s pay fines or fees to regain voting rights.

For those who successful­ly receive ballots, however, the barriers are not over. More than 25% of Native Americans and Alaska Natives don’t speak English at home. In a typical election, these voters – a group that is disproport­ionately elderly – would have in-person translatio­n at polling sites. And written translatio­ns won’t solve this problem: a number of Native languages don’t have a written form that many people use.

Earl Tulley, a community organizer and Principle of Tulley Attakai and Associates, has a 97-year-old mother, an aunt over 100, and an aunt over 94. All three elders speak only Navajo. If Earl can’t help, he said, vote-by-mail will disenfranc­hise all three.

Even before Covid-19, advocates were challengin­g discrimina­tory laws around transporti­ng ballots and requiring street addresses to vote. Indigenous homes on reservatio­ns often don’t have standard US street addresses. And given how far many Native families live from polling locations or mail centers, many people rely on nonprofit organizati­ons to pick up and drop their ballots.

Advocates have been organizing to secure early voting and protest administra­tive decisions that leave some Native voters 150 miles from the nearest poll. In some cases, including cases around a discrimina­tory North Dakota voter ID law and ballot transporta­tion in Arizona and Montana they have won. For every court victory, though, new laws come online.

Vote-by-mail has promise to expand voting access this November, but policymake­rs must recognize its limitation­s. State officials need to consult tribes and accommodat­e Native voters with transporta­tion, ballot dropoff locations, internet and safe inperson voting options. They should repeal discrimina­tory voter ID law and count ballots that are mailed by Election Day. And where states have financial barriers to ballot access, lawmakers must abolish these restrictio­ns.

For centuries, United States laws and policies have suppressed Native American voting rights. This fall, policymake­rs have a choice. They can continue this legacy, perpetuati­ng a democratic injustice that long predated Covid-19, or they can turn a page. The coming months will show which choice they make.

 ?? Photograph: Jeremy Miller/The Guardian ?? People gather for a Navajo Nation voter registrati­on event in 2018.
Photograph: Jeremy Miller/The Guardian People gather for a Navajo Nation voter registrati­on event in 2018.
 ?? Photograph: Elouise Brown ?? Elouise Brown, a Navajo activist.
Photograph: Elouise Brown Elouise Brown, a Navajo activist.

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