NORTON META TAG

Showing posts with label voting access. Show all posts
Showing posts with label voting access. Show all posts

16 July 2023

Honoring the Past, Paving the Future: Enhancing Voter Registration 22MAI23



 DON'T wait for 2024 to get here to become involved in the 2024 local, state, congressional and presidential elections. Right wing extremist, American fascist, racist, misogynist, patriarchist, oligarchs and theochrist are working together through elections to take over local governments (town councils, county supervisors, mayors), school boards, library councils and boards, elected law enforcement, because by controlling these local offices and organizations they can then determine who is elected state governor and to the state legislature and then who is elected to the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate and ultimately who is elected U.S. President. This is not a left wing extremist exaggeration, book banning, abortion restrictions and bannings, restrictions of trans medical procedures, restrictions of voting rights and other civil liberties are a threat to our democratic Republic. We must work together to keep America the democracy we love. Go to Rock The Vote to check your voter registration or register to vote. This from the ACLU.....

Honoring the Past, Paving the Future: Enhancing Voter Registration

Here’s how federal agencies can further expand voting access.

May 22, 2023
Sarah Brannon,
she/her/hers,
Managing Attorney,
ACLU Voting Rights Project

Last week marks the 30th anniversary of the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA), a landmark piece of legislation that has expanded access to the ballot for millions of Americans.

Signed by President Bill Clinton in 1993, the voting rights law strengthened American democracy. From enabling eligible voters to simultaneously register to vote when they apply for or renew a driver’s license, to offering voter registration opportunities via mail-in application opportunities, the NVRA helps make the promise of democracy real. The NVRA has been an amazing success. As of 2020, 160,000 million Americans have applied to get on the voter rolls through registration services the NVRA requires at departments of motor vehicles, disability offices, and public agencies across the country.

Although we’ve made great progress in expanding access to voter registration, it is important to remember we still have so much work to do to expand voter registration access. In 2021, President Biden issued an executive order to increase access to voting, encouraging federal agencies to utilize an untapped provision of the NVRA that contemplates federal agencies providing voter registration services. Since this announcement, several federal agencies have made public commitments to increase access to voting information and expand voter registration opportunities.

However, there is much more that can be done, not only to embrace the whole-of-government approach encouraged by the executive order, but also the unfulfilled promise contemplated since 1993 in the NVRA to include the federal government in agency registration opportunities. Earlier this year, the ACLU along with a coalition of the nation’s leading civil rights groups released a report, “Strengthening Democracy: A Progress Report on Federal Agency Action to Promote Access to Voting,” to highlight, at the federal agency level, what has been done and what is still needed to help ensure every eligible voter has robust, easy, and equal access to the ballot box.

A few agencies have made noteworthy headway. For example, by accepting National Voter Registration Act designations for the tribal institutions it operates, the Department of the Interior has moved to ensure that eligible students who attend these institutions have regular access to high-quality voter registration.

The Department of Veterans Affairs has also begun working with state election officials to secure NVRA designations. And by incorporating voter registration into the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program, the Treasury Department is helping to address persistent income-based gaps in voter registration by improving access to voter registration among people with low incomes.

Although progress has been made, for the most part, the ACLU and our partners found that most agencies have either made minimal progress on their initial strong commitments to expand voter access or have left important opportunities on the table. This must change; we must make the promise of democracy real for every single American.

Here are a few things federal agencies can do now to fully implement the executive order:

  • The Department of Health and Human Services should add an effective voter registration opportunity to the application for benefits on HealthCare.gov by the next open enrollment period.
  • United States Citizenship and Immigration Services should provide a robust opportunity to register to vote to all newly naturalized U.S. citizens.
  • The Department of Education should add a voter registration opportunity for applicants using the Free Application for Federal Student Aid.
  • The Bureau of Prisons, the agency within the Department of Justice which oversees federal prison facilities, and the U.S. Marshals Service, which oversees people in federal pre-trial custody, amongst other activities, should also fully implement the executive order. While both agencies have made efforts to improve voter access for eligible voters who are currently incarcerated in federal prisons or held in federal pre-trial custody, there is still more that can be done to ensure the full implementation of systems facilitating civic engagement and access to the ballot. You can read more about the steps they can take here.

As we honor the 30th anniversary of the NVRA, we must never allow the indispensable legacy of this pivotal voting rights law to fade into the past. Simultaneously, the Biden administration must embrace an unwavering dedication to wholeheartedly executing their voting access executive order. Such action not only fortifies our democracy but also empowers millions, ensuring their voices are heard through the power of the ballot.

12 October 2020

ACLU THE DEBRIEF: CBP Wants to Destroy Records of Misconduct. We Can't Let Them, VICTORY: Trump Administration Abandons Policy of Banning Abortion for Young Immigrants, ACLU Investigation: Formerly Incarcerated Nebraskans Incorrectly Told They Couldn't Vote, Facebook's Discrimination Against the LGBTQ Community, We're Calling for a Special, Independent Prosecutor for Police Abuses in Portland, At the Polls, Episode 1: What Will Election Night Look Like in a Global Pandemic?, We Are Not Okay, Congress: Expand Voting Access During COVID-19 12OKT20

ACLU DEBRIEF
U.S. Customs and Border Protection
CBP Wants to Destroy Records of Misconduct. We Can't Let Them
 

Customs and Border Protection (CBP), America's largest federal law enforcement agency, operates with routine impunity. Now, the agency has asked the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), which maintains federal agency records, to approve destruction of internal CBP records of misconduct. An agency rife with abuse should not be allowed to purge its own paper trail of wrongdoing. That's why the ACLU of Texas Border Rights Center, with over 100 partner organizations, has filed a public comment urging NARA to reject CBP's proposal. Read more


FROM THE FRONT LINES
 
VICTORY: Trump Administration Abandons Policy of Banning Abortion for Young Immigrants
 

As a direct result of the immense courage of our clients and three years of litigation, the Trump administration has officially abandoned its policy of preventing unaccompanied immigrant minors in its custody from accessing abortion care. We are certainly taking a moment to celebrate this hard-earned win, but the battle for "reproductive freedom for all" is far from over – including for others currently in immigration detention. The ACLU will continue to fight for access to reproductive health care for people in federal custody and beyond. Read more


 
Person placing vote into ballot box
ACLU Investigation: Formerly Incarcerated Nebraskans Incorrectly Told They Couldn't Vote
 

When a formerly incarcerated voter in Nebraska received notice that he couldn't vote after waiting out the state's two-year post-sentence time period, he turned to the ACLU. Our Nebraska team then launched an investigation that found the voter was not alone – around 400 formerly incarcerated Nebraskans received the same inaccurate letter. We've stepped in to make sure the Secretary of State corrects these errors before Election Day. Read more

(This link brings you to a third-party website, ketv.com)


 
LGBTQ+ flag in front of courthouse
Facebook's Discrimination Against the LGBTQ Community
 

Married couple Unsung Lilly has made music together for the past 8 years, creating empowering music for their fans. The COVID-19 pandemic put the couple in a difficult spot financially, so they turned to their community of fans on Facebook for help. But when they created a sponsored ad – Facebook rejected it, despite taking no issue with a similar ad of a heterosexual couple. Here's an up-close look at the couple's fight against Facebook's unfair and uneven standards and policies. Read more


 
We're Calling for a Special, Independent Prosecutor for Police Abuses in Portland
 

Following another weekend of aggressive policing in Portland, the ACLU of Oregon is pushing for Governor Brown to appoint a special, independent prosecutor to investigate the ongoing police abuses that have occurred in the city over the past several months. Police abuse of protesters, journalists, legal observers, medics, and bystanders must be stopped. Read more

(This link brings you to a third-party website, oregonlive.com)

TUNE IN
 
At the Polls logo
At the Polls, Episode 1: What Will Election Night Look Like in a Global Pandemic?

The ACLU's At Liberty podcast recently launched At the Polls, a weekly mini-series on the 2020 election and all things voting. In this first episode, At the Polls host and ACLU voting rights lawyer and organizer Molly McGrath talks about what to expect this year with election law scholar Rick Hasen and election administrator Rachel Rodriguez. Listen here

WHAT'S NEXT
 
Abstract image of person holding Black Lives Matter flag and two men marching with 'I Am A Man' signs
We Are Not Okay

If you are not Black and you're asking yourself, "How can I help my Black friends, family members, and colleagues coping with the daily trauma of racial injustice and violence against Black people?", here is a non-exhaustive list of what you can do today. Read more

TAKE ACTION
 
Abstract image of open hands with U.S capitol in the background
Congress: Expand Voting Access During COVID-19

Join us in calling on Congress to expand voting access during COVID 19 by including expanded early voting and no-excuse absentee voting in the next relief package. Take action