By Michael Lausch

We may be on the brink of the country’s largest voter disenfranchisement initiative in modern American history. The Supreme Court recently heard oral arguments in Crawford v. Marion County Board of Elections, a case which could determine thousands of votes come November 2008. While some are attacking the law as a xenophobic attempt to push illegal immigrants out of the U.S. political process—which it is—the statute could also end up hampering the ability of American college students to vote.
In a year when youth voting is reshaping the political landscape, you might expect state and federal governments to be promoting laws that make it easier, not harder, for young Americans to head to the polls. Lawmakers in Indiana aren’t. The law now being challenged in the Supreme Court, which was passed in 2005 by Indiana’s legislature, requires residents to present valid photo identification to vote. While the statute is aimed at keeping illegal immigrants away from the polls, it also carries with it some unexpected implications for college-age voters. Students who do not claim permanent residency in Indiana cannot vote in the state’s elections, even though most full-time college students spend at least nine months out of the year on campus. If out-of-state students who attend school at any of Indiana’s colleges or universities want to vote, they currently have two options: vote absentee in their home state, or change their permanent residency.
There are problems with both options. For college students, voting absentee isn’t always easy because, to be counted, most absentee ballots need to arrive no less than eight days before Election Day. At some universities, campus mail systems are notoriously slow or unreliable, and while planning ahead sounds good in theory, sometimes it’s difficult for college students to do. Before the voter ID law hit the books, students could vote in Indiana if they could produce a utility bill as proof of residency, but many students don’t pay utility bills directly since they live on campus and these fees are included the university’s room and board costs. A paycheck is also acceptable sometimes, but not all students work. But the issue isn’t just a question of convenience; it’s about the government’s role in promoting its elections. Should the government be making it easier or harder for its citizens to vote? Should states be erecting cumbersome barriers for a certain group of Americans to cast ballots? Out-of-state students also have the option of switching their permanent residency, of course, but that can come at a high cost: These students risk losing scholarships from their home states, and, since health insurance is often tied to one’s residency, rising healthcare costs.
Furthermore, why shouldn’t a valid student ID be sufficient to vote where one attends school? Matthew Segal and his student election rights group Student Association for Voter Empowerment, or SAVE, are in favor of such a statute. “Academic institutions allocate ID cards anyway, [and] there are few reasons why this form of ID is any less [valid] than, say, a utility bill or a bank statement,” Segal said.
Minnesota is one of the states leading the front on this initiative. In addition to being able to present a post-secondary school ID to vote, voters in Minnesota have the option of registering on the day of the election. Same-day registration often increases turnout, especially among young voters. Cumbersome advance registration itself is a uniquely American element to voting; in other nations, it is common for a person to show up to the polls on the day of an election with no advance notice to cast a vote. It is also worth noting that many countries hold elections on weekends, or else make Election Day a national holiday, giving working folks the time to get to a polling place and cast their votes.
Supporters of the Indiana law argue that the barriers the statue creates are minor inconveniences when compared to the risks of voter fraud. Reducing illegal voting is an important enough end to justify these controversial means, they say. During the oral arguments for Crawford v. Marion County Board of Elections this January, Justice Anthony Kennedy, who has become the tie-breaking vote in many recent cases, seemed to suggest that he is among these critics. “[Do] you want us to invalidate a statute on the ground that it’s a minor inconvenience to a small percentage of voters?" he asked lawyers representing the opponents of the law. Kennedy’s skepticism could make the difference in what many legal experts believe will be a 5-4 decision. David Ryden, an election-law expert and professor of political science at Hope College agrees: "Justice Kennedy—the key swing vote in this case—appears poised to lead a narrow Supreme Court majority in upholding the law.”
But such a law would only be justified if voter fraud were actually prevalent in America. In a Washington Post article called “The Myth of Voter Fraud,” Michael Waldman and Justin Levitt write that “before and after every close election, politicians and pundits proclaim: the dead are voting, foreigners are voting, people are voting twice. On closer examination, though, most such allegations don’t pan out.” In the state of Washington, for example, a 2005 election investigation found that among two million voters only one individual cast two ballots—hardly enough to swing an election. Punishment for voter fraud is already severe; the potential repercussions like fines or jail time generally deter the vast majority of potential fraudulent voters. As Waldman and Levitt write, “proven voter fraud, statistically, happens about as often as death by lightning strike.”
The bottom line is that a voter ID requirement could create an undue burden on a citizen’s right to vote. Voter ID laws are the first step to slipping backwards into voter disenfranchisement, and are eerily reminiscent of past disenfranchisement attempts like literacy tests and poll taxes. The state of Indiana, for example, charges a $21 fee for a driver’s license. If the figure sounds small, think of college students across the nation who work two or three jobs just to pay rent and don’t have the extra money to put into getting a new ID, much less the time or transportation to get down to the DMV. If the court sides with such dangerous legislation, similar laws could follow in states nationwide. In the end, this law, masquerading as a savior against voter fraud, does nothing more than set up a 21st century poll tax, and young voters will pay the price.
Michael Lausch is a senior at Hope College. He is an Intern for the Center for American Progress’ External Affairs department.
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Comments
“push illegal immigrants out of the U.S. political process”
Pardon me, what’s wrong with that?
I have no business in the political process of another nation any more than a citizen of another country has with mine.
— Chris - Feb 20, 06:18 PM - #This article is the most ridiculous article I have ever read. It makes me sick to think that people actually argue in favor of not identifying yourself prior to voting. I suppose you would like cashiers not to card for credit card purchases either.
— Sam - Feb 21, 11:16 AM - #Since when do most college students not have a valid driver’s license? and whats wrong with keeping illegal immigrants out of the vote?
— Jacob - Feb 21, 11:32 AM - #I can only agree with the opponents of this law.
— Christy - Feb 21, 11:35 AM - #I go to college in the middle of nowhere. We have a bus system down here, but it’s unreliable at best. Same goes for the mailing system. One of my friends was prevented from voting in the primaries on February 12th because her absentee ballot never arrived here.
Student voting should be encouraged, not discouraged.
I can only agree with the opponents of this law.
— Christy - Feb 21, 11:35 AM - #I go to college in the middle of nowhere. We have a bus system down here, but it’s unreliable at best. Same goes for the mailing system. One of my friends was prevented from voting in the primaries on February 12th because her absentee ballot never arrived here.
Student voting should be encouraged, not discouraged.
“Since when do most college students not have a valid driver’s license? and whats wrong with keeping illegal immigrants out of the vote?”
First of all, out-of-state students would not have an in-state driver’s license. However, that is what’s required.
— Christy - Feb 21, 11:42 AM - #Second, what is is with this hype about “illegal immigrants” lately? It’s not like they just came here recently, it’s been going on for a very long time. How about making it easier to immigrate legally? Maybe then there would be less illegals.
Chris is right, and Christy is half right.
We definitely ought to keep illegal immigrants from voting in our country. Not to pick on Mexico specifically, but I would have no more business voting in an election held there than a Mexican citizen would have voting in an election held here.
Christy’s point that making immigration easier would reduce illegal immigration is quite true. I am all for increasing immigration quotas and streamlining the process. However, until that happens, illegal immigrants are still illegal immigrants, and they have no business participating in our nation’s politics. The fact that the problem is older than the attention being given to it is non sequitur. As an admittedly extreme comparison, murder’s been around for a while too, but that doesn’t make it OK.
— Scott Buchanan - Feb 21, 04:49 PM - #Has your reporter even read Crawford v. Marion County? It has less to do with illegal imigrants than it does with keeping poor people, the disabled, and minorities from the polls to quell Democratic turnout.
Read the oral argument, and Judge Posner’s Circuit Court opinion, to clue yourself in to what you are talking about.
This article is fundamentally wrong on its facts, and has no grounding in modern day election law.
— Michael Radtke - Feb 21, 05:27 PM - #I agree with Christy. This article is about how STUDENTS are being discouraged from participating in the voting process and the dangers of allowing this type of legislation back into our country’s voting system. Comparing showing ID for a credit card transaction and showing ID to vote is a terrible analogy.
— Kayleigh - Feb 21, 07:37 PM - #Illegal immigrants voting? Would you hike 3 days through the desert to take some lousy job that no American will take, then risk prosecution and deportation to vote in another country’s election?
The handful of illegal voters (and its just a handful) largely did so because they erroneously thought their applications for citizenship had been processed.
Meanwhile, I, who have been a citizen since birth 45 years ago had to cast a provisional ballot in Ohio because a different government agency (Social Security) had my drivers license.
— Greg M - Mar 13, 02:01 PM - #