Making voting easier, not harder

Published October 7, 2013

Editorial by Salisbury Post, October 1, 2013.

If the new North Carolina voting law merely required voters to show a photo I.D. card, few could argue with it.

But several provisions in the law appear aimed at simply making voting more difficult — cutting back early voting by a week, ending same-day voter registration, accepting a very narrow range of identification. Some experts have called North Carolina’s voting law the most restrictive in the nation.

Instead of battling imaginary voter fraud, the state should be trying to boost participation in the democratic process. Municipal elections are a case in point. The last time Rowan’s cities and towns elected their leaders, in 2011, turnout among eligible voters was 14.52 percent, according to the Rowan County Board of Elections. Broken down by town, participation went from a low of 7.26 percent in the Rowan part of Kannapolis to nearly 23 percent in East Spencer. Salisbury’s turnout was 14.89 percent.

By comparison, more than 66 percent of Rowan voters cast ballots last year, when McCrory won the governorship and President Obama won re-election.

The new voter ID law does not go into effect until 2016, so it should not be a factor in this year’s municipal elections — other than to put a chill on turnout if people are confused about coming restrictions.

The law could just as easily fire people up. The N.C. legislature took a hard-right turn under Republican control this year, spurring moderates and liberals into action. The Moral Monday protests speak for more people than McCrory and company seem to realize.

“We shouldn’t be giving everyday North Carolinians fewer opportunities to make their voices heard while we are giving corporations more opportunities to influence elections,” U.S. Sen. Kay Hagan said in a press release Monday. Hagan, a Democrat, first won election in 2008, defeating Salisbury native Elizabeth Dole, then the Republican incumbent. That was the year Obama first won the presidency, and the Republican-led drive to make voting more difficult in many states started soon after.

The majority of voters support requiring a photo ID to vote, but that changes when pollsters ask about the finer details of the law. One poll by Public Policy Polling found 59 percent opposed the early voting reduction, while 68 percent opposed eliminating straight-party tickets, another change in the law. People who have doubts about the legislature’s intentions and the impact of the law welcome the Justice Department’s challenge. The most restrictive voting law in the land should be put to the test before it starts turning people away at the polls.

 

October 7, 2013 at 9:23 am
Richard Bunce says:

Straight ticket voting makes voting easier? People will not show up to vote if they cannot vote straight ticket? The Democratic Party loves it and that is all you need to get about that issue.

October 7, 2013 at 1:31 pm
Joe Nico says:

God forbid we ask citizens to be responsible enough to work in-person voting into their busy schedules over an 11-day period or by mail voting over a 30-day + time period!

October 7, 2013 at 3:59 pm
Bill Worley says:

The standard GOP mantra here is to label any opposition to this asinine legislation as a fan of fraudulent voting. It's a fairly typical GOP approach to being called on legislation they craft solely to attack a specific group of people. Anyone with a few active brain cells knows that the only part of the Voting Bill that the majority of NC citizens support is photo ID. All the rest were designed to reduce the turnout of people who tend to vote democrat. Period. If we really cared about voter fraud, the bill would have significantly addressed absentee ballots, and never would have included provisions to give corporations and the wealthy even more political influence.

October 8, 2013 at 4:33 pm
TP Wohlford says:

Since we're using terms like "asinine" I guess this is open season on the other side, free to vent our spleens?

Anyone with half a brain (ahem) could see that Holder is concerned about the voter ID, since that is what is in his filing. Does he care about the rest? Nope. Do Dems care about the rest? Well, they say they do, but that is because the voter ID thing is polling so badly for them.

October 8, 2013 at 11:38 pm
Richard Bunce says:

Speaking of standard mantra... corporations and the wealthy. You do know that both of those categories contain people, good and bad, just like every other category. You let us know when you find someone who will not vote without the straight ticket option on the ballot.

October 8, 2013 at 4:34 pm
TP Wohlford says:

REPOST FOR ONE CAUGHT IN "MODERATION" FOR A FEW DAYS:

But that is precisely what bothers Dems, and is the subject of the Holder lawsuit. And Dems do argue with it.

Same thing in Georgia I hear.