| |
You
should’ve
seen
this
coming:
College
students
face new
voting
restrictions
By Jack
Fitzpatrick,
News21/Tell
Us USA
SAN
FRANCISCO
(Tell Us
USA) -
Morehouse
College
students
can use
their ID
cards to
buy food
and
school
supplies,
use
computer
labs and
get
books
from the
library,
but they
can’t
use ID
from the
historic
Atlanta
school
to vote.
A few
miles
away,
Georgia
State
University
students
use
their ID
in the
same
way, but
their
cards
allow
them to
vote.
Across
the
country,
college
students
are
facing
new
questions
about
their
voting
rights.
In some
states,
communities
are
debating
whether
students
can vote
as state
residents
or vote
absentee
from
their
hometowns.
In
others,
legislators
have
debated
whether
student
IDs can
be used
at the
polls.
In
Georgia,
the
debate
started
with the
state’s
voter ID
law,
which
accepts
student
IDs from
state
colleges
but not
private
institutions
such as
Morehouse.
College
students,
who led
a record
turnout
among
18- to
24-year-old
voters
in 2008,
could
play a
major
role in
this
November’s
elections,
but
their
impact
could be
blunted
by
states’
voter ID
requirements.
In
Georgia,
for
example,
legislators
have
rejected
student
IDs from
private
schools,
saying
the lack
of
uniformity
among
school
IDs
would be
a burden
for poll
workers.
There
are 198
accredited
postsecondary
schools
in
Georgia,
including
beauty
academies
and
music
institutes,
according
to the
National
Center
of
Education
Statistics.
Even
many ID
cards
from
public
colleges
are
rejected
under
some
state
laws,
because
the
cards do
not
include
addresses,
issuance
and
expiration
dates.
In
Wisconsin,
some
colleges
paid for
new,
state-acceptable
student
IDs
while
others
charged
students
for new
IDs.
Groups
that
advocate
on
behalf
of young
voters
say
restrictions
against
school
IDs
could
drive
down
student
turnout.
“They’re
another
one of
these
suppression
laws
that
affects
disabled,
older
and
younger
voters
on equal
levels,
but the
older
population
is in
the
habit of
voting,”
said
Sarah
Stern, a
spokeswoman
for
national
advocacy
group
the
League
of Young
Voters.
Georgia
state
Rep.
Alisha
Thomas
Morgan,
a
Democrat,
has
introduced
three
bills
since
2008 to
accept
IDs from
all
accredited
schools,
rather
than
just
public
schools.
All
three
bills
failed.
Morgan
got the
idea in
2008
from one
of her
office
interns.
Aubrey
Patterson,
who also
worked
as a
poll
worker
in
Chatham
County,
told
Morgan
that in
the 2008
elections,
he saw
private
college
and
university
students
told
that
they
could
not use
their
school
IDs at
the
polls.
“There
was a
lot of
frustration
from
students
attending
private
schools,”
said
Patterson,
a
Morehouse
alumnus
who is
now a
graduate
student
at
Georgia
State.
Accepting
student
IDs
makes
voting
more
convenient,
Patterson
said,
because
many
students
don’t
have
driver’s
licenses
and
don’t
have a
reason
to carry
another
form of
ID.
“Some
students
don’t
carry
around
too much
money
and
stuff
like
that,”
Patterson
said.
“The
card is
almost
like an
ATM.”
Jared
Thomas,
spokesman
for
Georgia
Secretary
of State
Brian
Kemp,
said
Kemp
supported
Morgan’s
bill and
worked
with her
on it.
Thomas
said he
didn’t
believe
Morgan’s
bill
would be
difficult
for the
secretary
of
state’s
office
to
implement,
and that
they
would
support
similar
bills in
the
future.
Thomas
said he
thought
the law
was
clear
about
its ID
requirements,
even
without
adding
private
school
IDs.
“It’s
very
clear
right
now that
if
you’re
at UGA
(the
University
of
Georgia),
it’s a
state-issued
ID, and
if
you’re
at Emory
(University)
or
Mercer
(University),
it’s
private
and
would
not
count by
any
stretch
as
state-issued
ID,”
Thomas
said.
On a
national
scale,
voter ID
laws
could
have a
significant
impact
on
student
voters
in the
November
elections.
Stern
said
college
students
were one
of the
demographics
targeted
by voter
ID laws
because
students
are
likely
to vote
for
Democrats.
“It
definitely
will
affect
turnout,”
Stern
said.
“And
people
know
that.
It’s a
concerted,
partisan
strategy.”
President
Barack
Obama
won
two-thirds
of the
vote
among
18- to
24-year-olds
in 2008,
according
to exit
polls.
That was
the only
age
group to
significantly
increase
turnout
over
2004.
Mahen
Gunaratna,
an Obama
campaign
spokesman,
said the
campaign
was
making
young
voters a
priority
again
this
year and
that
voter ID
laws
worked
against
turnout.
Arizona
state
Rep.
Martin
Quezada,
an Obama
campaign
surrogate,
said
young
voters
were
just as
important
now as
they
were
four
years
ago.
“The
youth
vote is
critical
after
the 2008
election,”
he said.
“It’s a
different
group of
18- to
24-year-olds
now, but
they
have the
same
reasons
to be
excited.”
Republican
presidential
hopeful
Mitt
Romney’s
campaign
did not
respond
to
requests
for an
interview.
Regardless
of
whether
student
IDs are
accepted,
voter ID
laws
might
put
young
voters
at a
disadvantage.
A 2005
University
of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Employment
and
Training
Institute
study
found
that
white,
black
and
Hispanic
18- to
24-year-olds
in the
state
were
less
likely
to have
a
driver’s
license
than the
general
voting
population.
The
study
found
that 78
percent
of black
men in
Wisconsin
in that
age
group
did not
have a
valid
driver’s
license.
Despite
the
obstacles
they
present,
voter ID
laws
haven’t
received
much
opposition
from
students.
A poll
by the
nonprofit
Minnesota
Public
Interest
Research
Group,
which
advocates
on
behalf
of
environmental
and
social
issues,
found
that
most
Minnesota
college
students
support
that
state’s
proposed
voter ID
amendment,
even
though
the
majority
of them
do not
have the
necessary
identification.
Some
states,
such as
Georgia
and
Indiana,
accept
student
IDs from
public
schools
because
they are
issued
by the
government.
Others,
such as
Kansas,
accept
student
IDs from
all
accredited
schools.
And
some,
like
Wisconsin,
might
exclude
many
public
and
private
universities
by
requiring
dates
when the
cards
were
issued
and when
they
expire.
The
University
of
Wisconsin
system,
with
more
than
181,000
students
enrolled,
did not
include
that
information
on
student
IDs when
the bill
passed.
Wisconsin’s
voter ID
law has
been
blocked
twice in
court,
but the
state
would
have
some of
the
strictest
ID
requirements
in the
country
if
injunctions
are
lifted.
After
the law
was
passed,
the
University
of
Wisconsin–Eau
Claire
provided
new,
optional
student
IDs
including
the
necessary
information.
To
offset
the cost
of the
new IDs,
the
university
will
charge
$2 for
each, a
cost
that
Democratic
state
Rep.
Gary
Hebl
calls
unconstitutional.
“It’s a
poll
tax,
obviously,”
Hebl
said.
“The
purpose
of the
card is
to vote
with
it.”
And Hebl
said the
low cost
of the
IDs
didn’t
make a
difference.
“To
charge
people
to vote
is
unconstitutional,”
he said.
“If it
costs a
nickel,
it’s
unconstitutional;
$2 could
be the
difference
between
buying a
loaf of
bread or
voting.”
Paydon
Miller,
president
of the
University
of
Wisconsin–Eau
Claire
Student
Democrats,
said
that
although
the cost
for the
new
student
IDs is
low, it
is wrong
to make
students
“jump
through
hoops.”
“We are
placing
a burden
on the
student
body
that
doesn’t
exist
for
other
people,”
Miller
said.
In
Texas,
student
IDs
might be
rejected
at the
polls
while
gun
permits
are
accepted,
depending
on a
lawsuit
over the
state’s
voter ID
law.
Texas’
law
passed
the
legislature
but has
been
blocked
by the
Department
of
Justice.
If the
state
wins
against
the
Justice
Department,
no
student
IDs from
public
or
private
schools
would be
accepted
at the
polls.
Natalie
Butler,
a 2012
graduate
and
former
student
government
president
of the
University
of
Texas–Austin,
said the
law
would
have a
negative
effect
on
students.
She is
particularly
worried
about
local
elections
in
Austin,
where
student
turnout
rates
already
are low.
“If
we’re
going to
make it
even
harder
for
students
to
impact
city
politics,
that’s a
huge
problem,”
she
said.
In
addition
to
restrictions
on using
school
IDs,
students
face
challenges
based on
residency.
Out-of-state
students
must
choose
which
state
they
want to
vote in
— their
home
state,
where
they may
have to
file an
absentee
ballot,
or at
school,
where
they
face
scrutiny
from
local
residents.
In New
Hampshire,
Republican
state
Rep.
Gregory
Sorg
tried
last
year to
bar
college
students
from
voting
in the
state
unless
they
lived
there
before
enrolling.
And
state
House
Speaker
William
O’Brien,
a
Republican,
received
national
attention
when he
mentioned
voting
restrictions
that
would
affect
students,
such as
same-day
voter
registration,
and then
attacked
how he
presumed
students
would
vote.
“Voting
as a
liberal,
that’s
what
kids
do,” he
was
recorded
saying
at a New
Hampshire
Tea
Party
event.
“They
lack the
life
experience
and they
just
vote
their
feelings.”
Sorg’s
bill,
which
did not
pass,
included
provisions
that
would
have let
students
prove
their
state
residence
if they
really
planned
to stay
there,
but Sorg
said
most
college
students
live on
an
isolated
campus
and have
no
community
ties.
“It
distorts
the way
a
community
is run,”
Sorg
said.
“Transients
could
descend
on a
community
and take
it
over.”
In
Maine,
state
Republican
Party
Chairman
Charlie
Webster
accused
206
out-of-state
college
students
of
committing
voter
fraud.
That
prompted
Secretary
of State
Charlie
Summers
to
investigate.
Summers,
also a
Republican,
found no
cases of
voter
fraud or
double
voting,
but he
mailed
letters
to all
the
students,
asking
them to
either
cancel
their
registration
in Maine
or apply
for a
state
driver’s
licenses.
Despite
these
challenges
to
out-of-state
students,
Stern
said the
League
of Young
Voters
encourages
college
students
to vote
in the
state
where
they go
to
school
because
the
process
of
receiving
an
absentee
ballot
is so
complicated.
“The
likelihood
of
students
registering
at their
parent’s
house
and then
correctly
filling
out the
application
for an
absentee
ballot
is low,”
Stern
said.
Lizzie
Chen,
Alia
Conley,
Emily
Nohr and
Alex
Remington
of
News21
contributed
to this
article.
Jack
Fitzpatrick
was a
Hearst
Foundations
Fellow
this
summer
for
News21. |