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UPDATE: NVRA enforcement crucial for voter participation

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UPDATE: On Wednesday two federal judges approved a settlement in a case(link is external) brought by the Black Political Empowerment Project(link is external)and ACTION United(link is external) against Pennsylvania public assistance agencies that failed to provide voter registration opportunities for their clients. Under the provisions of the settlement(link is external), they will now offer voter registration applications on their websites and will post signs with registration information at their offices. They will also implement additional training and oversight for their employees. And when assistance recipients update their claims, voting-related forms will be mailed to them automatically. ACTION United president Lucille Prater-Holliday(link is external): "Without full and robust compliance with the NVRA the disenfranchisement and disengagement of these citizens is only perpetuated. We are glad that the Commonwealth has bound itself to a meaningful implementation of the statute." Earlier we reported about a settlement(link is external) in a suit over NVRA violations in Massachusetts.

With voting rights under attack nationwide(link is external), we must remember our democracy is only strongest when all citizens have the opportunity to participate – which is exactly why the enforcement of the National Voter Registration Act has grown increasingly paramount ahead of the November election, especially its provision affording public assistance recipients the opportunity to register to vote at public assistance agencies.

A coalition of voting rights advocates(link is external) is working to hold states accountable. Litigation citing NVRA violations has been brought against nine states – most recently in Nevada(link is external) against(link is external) Secretary of State Ross Miller and Department of Health & Human Services Director Michael Willden. Litigation could soon follow in Alabama(link is external) where Demos(link is external) has joined the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law(link is external) and Project Vote(link is external) in filing notice against(link is external) Secretary of State Beth Chapman.

Sarah Brannon, Project Vote:(link is external)

When done properly, public agency registration is one of the most effective means of ensuring that all citizens are offered the opportunity to participate in their government. It reaches people who are less likely to register to vote through other means, including low-income residents, minorities, the elderly, and the disabled.

Lonnie Feemster, Reno-Sparks NAACP:(link is external)

To empower those without a voice is our most important work and we will continue to fight to allow those without great wealth to speak truth to power. Full participation in the electoral process empowers the poor and disadvantaged.

For more information, check out The Right to Vote under Attack: The Campaign to Keep Millions of Americans from the Ballot Box, a Right Wing Watch: In Focus report by PFAW Foundation.