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As someone who analyzes election reform for a living, last weekend I decided to get
off my usual soap box and interact with real voters. Through a new nonpartisan,
nonprofit organization called Get in the
Game, I volunteered to register people to vote at Yankee Stadium (as
a fan, it seemed like it might be fun anyway). As I accosted people eating hot
dogs and waiting for friends to arrive, I discovered how very real the problems
in the systemthe very ones I've been spouting aboutcan be for average
people who want to participate in the elections process.
My first encounter was both heartwarming and heartbreaking. I approached a
middle-aged couple sitting at what's called "the big bat." The husband
was registered; the wife was not. "You know, you really should vote,"
he told her. So she tentatively, nervously even, agreed to fill out the form.
She was almost 60 years old. She had never voted before. She filled out the
registration application, looked up at me with wonder, and said, "That's
it?"
"That's it," I told her, adding that she would receive a letter in
the mail from her local Board of Elections telling her the location of her polling
site. "I always thought it was so hard," she said, "I had no
idea."
I wondered why she had no idea it was so easy. Had she never seen a voter registration
form before? Clearly she had not. How could you go through your whole life and
never be offered a voter registration form? What does that say about how we
undertake the registration of voters in this country?
Another would-be voter presented me with a real life example of something I've
been writing
about a great deal latelythe problems presented by the new voter
identification requirement. I helped to register a young man who had lived in
California for several years but had recently returned to New Jersey and wanted
to be able to vote in his home state. But I began to learn that his getting
into the voting booth would not be as simple as filling out the form I handed
him. Under the new law, it was possible that his registration application would
be considered a "mail-in" form, requiring him to present identification
when going to the polls. Such identification must be "a current and valid
photo identification" or "a copy of a current utility bill, bank statement,
government check, paycheck, or other government document that shows the name
and address of the voter."
But he had no such ID. His license was still a California license, and all
of his other identification still had the California address too. His bills
were in his parents' names and he had no identification that I could be sure
would be accepted. He promised me he would change his driver's license in time
for the election.
My final encounter was the most disturbing of all. While I was badgering a
crowd of people, a young man motioned to me and said quietly, "Can I ask
you a question? If you have committed a felony, can you register to vote?"
I told him that yes, in New York if he had completed his sentence he gets his
voting rights back. "But my probation officer told me I would never be
able to vote again," he said. After holding back my own outrage that he
had been misinformed by someone who should know better, I told him this was
flat out wrong and counseled him about what action to take.
I'm not sure how many volunteers would be able to give him the correct answer
and wonder how many probation officers out there are giving out such flagrantly
wrong information. It's a worrisome example of how New
York is not fulfilling its obligation to ensure that ex-felons have
their voting rights restored in a state where the law says they must be. But
it was profoundly disturbing to see the problem personified by a man whounlike
so many other Americansreally wanted to vote.
Which brings me to the last lesson I learned. Even with the intensity of this
year's elections, there are a ton of people who really don't care. Sure, I'd
read all of the literature about voter apathy, but seeing it live really brought
it home. I approached a great many people who told me no, they were not registered
to vote, and when I asked them if they wanted to do so, they said no. I tried
to walk away at that point, but in many instances these people volunteered their
reasons: they didn't care period; it wouldn't make a difference; and all
politicians are [fill in expletive]. And yes, a lot of these people were young.
Yankee Stadium has always been a playground for me, but on this sunny afternoon
it was a classroom. I was able to see the connection between the problems I
had been writing and speaking about with the people they were affecting. At
the same time, I was distressed to see how much more work needs to be donenot
only in fixing the administrative obstacles that clearly still pervade the system,
but in changing the way Americans, especially young Americans, feel about democracy
and politics.
I'm a big-time baseball fan. Yet I had to wonder how many of my fellow fans
at Yankee Stadium on Sunday had voted for Derek Jeter to be on the all-star
team but will not be voting for president of the United States in November.
Tova Andrea Wang is a program officer and Democracy Fellow at The Century
Foundation.
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