Following the historic 2008 election and the plethora of problems with voter registrations – from partisan cries of voter fraud by third party registration drives to voter suppression from bad list maintenance procedures – syndicated columnist Robyn Blumner offers a solution: Universal Voter Registration.
“The problems arose because our old system of state-by-state registration rules — some of which appear designed for a mail system via pony express — is outmoded and frankly retains vestiges of our racist past,” wrote Blumner in a Nov. 23 op-ed . “We need to follow the lead of at least 24 other countries and adopt a system of automatic and permanent voter registration. “
Blumner asserts that problems with voter registration would disappear if state or federal government took responsibility for ensuring every eligible citizen was registered to vote. This would eliminate the need for third-party voter registration drives, cut the “redundant, phony” and illegal cards that “gum up” the voter registration process, and curb voter disenfranchisement from problem-prone procedures, such as “No Match, No Vote,” she said.
“But if the pragmatic arguments don’t sway, perhaps the moral ones will. Holding onto the current voter registration system is like cleaving to a relic of our disgraced history,” she wrote, recalling the origin of voter registration, which along with literacy tests and poll taxes, began “in the late 19th century as a way to tamp down the votes of ‘undesirables,'” which meant immigrants and freed slaves.
“Then there is the length of time between registration and the election,” she wrote. “While eight states allow registration and voting on the same day, 21 states cut off registration on Oct. 6. We can send money around the world in the blink of an eye, but it apparently takes weeks of lead time to put a voter into a database. Ridiculous.”
“Despite the large turnout in the last election, there are still 64 million unregistered voters in the country,” she wrote. “Universal registration needs to be tried.”