When
I voted last year in downtown Washington, DC, I was able to walk down
the street, cast my ballot, and get back to the office in less than 30
minutes. But according to a
new report by two voting rights groups,
the Advancement Project and OurTime.org, plenty of American voters
weren't so lucky. According to their research, African Americans,
Latinos, and millennials in Virginia and Florida—two key battleground
states—faced significantly longer wait times than older white voters in
2012. This was largely because the former groups are more inclined to
utilize early voting, which was restricted in both states last year. And
according to the report, this new "time tax"—along with other voting
obstacles, like strict ID laws—will likely continue to dampen voter
turnout among these groups in 2016.
In 2012, Florida cut early voting from 14 days to 8 days, and lines
were so long, more than 200,000 Florida voters gave up and went home,
according to data collected by the
Orlando Sentinel.
The Advancement Project and OurTime.org report focused on 5,196 of the
6,100 voting precincts that were used last November in Florida—which
faced some of the longest voting lines in the country—and found that
young voters spent a disproportionately longer time waiting to vote. For
example, in Orange County, which has the highest percentage of voters
younger than 30 in the state (22 percent), precincts closed an average
of 86 minutes after the 7 p.m. deadline, with one precinct closing five
hours late. The report found that in Orange County, the trend indicated
that the more voters under 30 there were at a certain precinct, the
later the closing time.
"Regarding the number of people willing to wait in line to vote in
2012, there were others who didn't vote, and there is no guarantee that
voters will always be able to wait so long to exercise their fundamental
rights," says Katherine Culliton-González, director of Advancement
Project's Voter Protection Program. The report makes the case that young
voters have less flexibility with their work schedules, and when early
voting days are cut, as they were in Florida, lines get longer.
Millennials (defined in the report as people between the ages of 18 and
29) are also more racially diverse than the rest of the population,
meaning that there is often an overlap between young voters and voters
of color. This
2013 MIT report found that voters of color are also more likely to wait in line than white voters:
The conservative
Heritage Foundation
maintains that African Americans face longer voting times than white
voters because they "tend to be concentrated in large urban areas" and
"the most populous areas had longer wait times than those living in
areas with fewer voters." But Culliton-González, from the Advancement
Project, tells
Mother Jones that her group's study disproves
this, since their research found that there wasn't a clear correlation
between longer lines and precincts with dense populations. She says
that, in Virginia, for example, "unless a voter can prove they are sick,
otherwise disabled, or have to travel for work on Election Day, all
voters must vote on the first Tuesday in November. These limits are
probably what caused the disparities, as due to socioeconomic factors,
many young voters of color have less flexibility in their work
schedules." Voting rights groups argue that all states should offer
flexible early voting—but some states have done the opposite: North
Carolina, for example, is restricting early voting from 17 days to 10
days, starting in 2014.
Culliton-González adds, "We are concerned about 2014, but even more
concerned about 2016," since Florida and other states will likely not
have enough early voting time so that voters can avoid long lines. (The
Advancement Project didn't find evidence of the "time tax" in the state
elections earlier this month, partly because voter turnout was so low.)
But even if early voting is taken care of, young voters of color are
also more likely to be turned away from the polls because of
identification requirements. This was true in 2012, even in states that
didn't have voter ID requirements on the books (see chart below). In the
state elections that occurred earlier this month, numerous voters
complained of being unable to vote because of real or perceived voter ID laws.
According to data collected by the Black Youth Project, an activist
group that does research on issues that affect African American youth,
only 67 percent of Latino youth and 71 percent of black youth possess
driver's licenses, compared to 85 percent of white youth. Additionally,
three times more young black voters than white voters said that lack of
an ID was the reason they didn't vote in 2012. The Advancement Project
and OurTime.org have submitted their report to the Presidential
Committee on Election Administration, President Obama's group that is
tasked with finding ways to improve voting.
Reporter
Dana Liebelson is a reporter in Mother Jones' Washington bureau. Her work has also appeared in The Week, TIME's Battleland, Truthout, OtherWords and Yahoo! News. |
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