What to Know About New Voting Laws and the Midterms

2022-06-19 00:15:54 By : Mr. Bob Wang

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by Dena Bunis, AARP, May 11, 2022

Caroline Brehman/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Voting used to be simple. A large majority of us would wake up on Election Day, go to our local polling place and cast our ballot. Our biggest challenges were getting there and deciding which candidates to choose.

America went into a virtual lockdown some eight months before the 2020 presidential election, and as the primaries progressed and the national election approached, voters became increasingly concerned about the safety of in-person voting.

In response, lawmakers enacted measures that greatly expanded the ability of citizens to vote without going to a polling place. Excuses for casting absentee ballots were waived, more drop boxes were added, and some jurisdictions even provided drive-through voting. In addition, early voting hours were added to avoid forcing voters to wait in long lines on Election Day.

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But in the months that followed the election, something else surfaced: unproven allegations of widespread voter fraud. And so certain state legislators got busy again. Some voted to require residents to clear new hurdles before voting, in an effort, lawmakers claimed, to increase security. These laws include asking for more identification at the polls or on absentee ballots and applications, increased scrutiny of registration lists, cutting back on early voting hours and drop boxes, and making it more difficult to vote by mail.

At the same time, other states saw the evolving election dynamics as a positive development, and so they passed new laws to make permanent changes to make it easier to vote.

The result of all these efforts: unprecedented differences between states in how residents can vote.

According to the Brennan Center for Justice, the New York University School of Law project that tracks election law changes, as of this past January, 19 states had passed 33 laws since the 2020 election that the center says restrict voting access. Over the same time, 25 states adopted 62 measures that make it easier to vote.

The bottom line: How much will these new laws actually affect citizens’ ability to vote, and will they affect how many people cast their ballots in this November’s highly important midterm elections?

Experts doubt these measures will have a significant impact on turnout this November in many states, but new restrictions could complicate voters’ ability to successfully cast their ballots. Election advocates stress that voters need to check out what, if any, changes have been made in their state.

“One of the best pieces of advice, I think overall, is to make a plan to vote,” says Justin Grimmer, codirector of the Democracy and Polarization Lab at Stanford University. The plan, Grimmer says, should include knowing where your polling place is, how you are going to get there, whether the site is accessible for people with mobility issues, and whether your state has identification requirements.

If you want to vote from home, check the absentee voting rules in your state. You’ll need to know how to apply for an absentee ballot, whether any forms of identification need to be included with the returned ballot, whether and where your signature is required, the proper way to submit your ballot, and whether a witness signature will be required.​

“And then, finally, as they’re making this plan, I want to encourage them to check on their registration,” Grimmer says. Each state has a different process to verify you are registered; go to your state’s voting website to find out the procedure.

Not currently registered? When voters need to register varies by state, with many requiring registration 30 days before an election. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 21 states will allow voters to register to vote on the same day they cast their ballot.

The rush to change voting rules has been met with aggressive media coverage and the usual partisan rancor. Experts acknowledge that more attention has been paid to laws that seem to restrict voter access than to those that expand it, but note there’s a legitimate reason for that: Restrictive laws are the ones more likely to affect people’s ability to vote.

“We absolutely need to make sure that our elections are fair and fraud isn’t occurring,” says Nancy Martorano Miller, an associate professor of political science at the University of Dayton. “But we also need to find ways to make it easier to cast ballots, because the whole system rests on citizens participating. That’s the primary way in which citizens give their consent to be governed — by voting.”

Miller said the corrupt political machines in the 1890s gave birth to many of the laws that all these years later govern voter registration, mandate a secret ballot and determine how to verify that the person who is casting a ballot is, indeed, that person. She adds that it’s too soon to tell if any of the voting laws that have been put in place since 2020 — whether restrictive or expansive — will have any impact on turnout in 2022 and beyond.

AARP’s 2022 voter engagement campaign, Our Voices Decide, is dedicated to helping older voters navigate this new election landscape. In some states, the organization has worked with state lawmakers to push for measures that expand — not restrict — a citizen’s ability to cast a ballot. “As part of our mission to empower Americans 50-plus, AARP has long advocated for fair and straightforward election procedures,” says Nancy LeaMond, AARP executive vice president and chief advocacy and engagement officer. “Older Americans must be able to freely, easily and safely exercise their constitutional right to vote. At the same time, we are working to ensure that our elections are free from fraud and abuse.”

AARP has produced election guides for all 50 states, plus Washington D.C., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, that voters can consult to view the election rules where they live.

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The consensus among experts is that Arizona, Florida, Georgia and Texas have adopted measures that could most restrict people’s ability to vote.

As with the laws that could restrict access to voting, most of the measures that experts say have the potential to make it easier to vote center on rules governing mail voting and early voting.

Here are some ways to help you make sure you can successfully cast your ballot in upcoming primary or midterm votes. In addition, AARP is regularly updating its online voter guides, so you can connect with your state’s information.

Dena Bunis covers Medicare, health care, health policy and Congress. She also writes the “Medicare Made Easy” column for the AARP Bulletin. An award-winning journalist, Bunis spent decades working for metropolitan daily newspapers, including as Washington bureau chief for the Orange County Register and as a health policy and workplace writer for Newsday.

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