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Responding to concerns that the votes of military personnel were not adequately
counted in the last presidential election, the Pentagon is making
extraordinary efforts to ensure that its personnel and their families
are registering and will vote on November 2. That's a praiseworthy effort. Here's
another idea: use the Pentagon initiative as a model to encourage citizen participation
throughout the country, perhaps through the auspices of the newly created Election
Assistance Commission.
There are many communities of Americans who distrust the system, believe their
votes won't count, and therefore won't register or vote. These groups could
surely benefit from just the type of outreach the military is undertaking abroad.
Under the Pentagon's program, commanders all the way up to Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfield are sending messages through emails, commercials, and brochures
that everyone should vote. Campaign supervisors are assigned to military bases
and are responsible for getting the soldiers involvedindeed they are expected
to produce weekly reports for commanders on the results they have achieved.
In addition, according to the New York Times, "For every 100 soldiers,
there is now a voting representative. Armed with absentee-ballot information
for every state, the 'voting rep' must make two 'personal contacts' with each
soldier."
The Times further reports that "civics classes at base high schools have
incorporated voter education into lessons, base movie theaters show public service
announcements, and voter-drive organizers have posted banners at commissary
and post exchange stores. Across the American military world, the week of Labor
Day was officially designated Armed Forces Voter Week. Oct. 11 to 15 will be
Absentee Voting Week."
Imagine what such a focus on the importance of voting could mean for other
groups of Americans who have historically been disenfranchised or are less likely
to vote. For example, what if this model was applied to the many communities
of racial minorities who have been subject to repeated disenfranchisement, including
in the 2000 election? We know that there have been numerous
incidents of voter intimidation in these areas even in recent years
that have depressed voter turnout.
Moreover, direct efforts to suppress the vote notwithstanding, there is widespread
mistrust in these and other communities about the reliability of voting machines.
We know now that African
American votes were far less likely to be counted in the 2000 election,
particularly when punch card ballot machines were used.
Or how about undertaking comparably ambitious efforts to get young people more
involved? Only about one-third of young people voted in the last presidential
election, and the number of young voters has been declining steadily over the
last thirty years. Numerous
nonprofit organizations have filled the void to get youth activated,
but imagine if the government stepped in to play a role. Consider even just
the inclusion of civic education classes in high schools in which not just the
importance of voting, but how to vote, was incorporatedas it now is at
high schools at military bases. Imagine if there were such public service announcements
in movie theaters.
Or what about trying to activate and educate poorer communities? After all,
of those who earned between $10,000 and $15,000 a year, 59 percent were registered
to vote, and only 44 percent of those registered actually voted in 2000. By
comparison, 82 percent of those who earned more than $75,000 a year were registered
and 75 percent of those registered actually
voted in 2000.
A genuine democracy relies on the participation of all the citizenry. The Pentagon
has recognized this and is taking action with respect to its soldiers. Now the
rest of the federal government should follow its lead and do the same for civilians.
Tova Andrea Wang is a program officer and Democracy Fellow at The Century
Foundation.
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