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Triana

(22,666 posts)
Wed Jul 22, 2015, 11:19 AM Jul 2015

Between 2011 and 2014, voter applications submitted by NC agencies plummeted by 69%

Army veteran and Fayetteville, North Carolina resident Sherry Denise Holverson calls herself “Auntie Sam,” because of her long history of helping others register to vote and get to the polls. But when she herself went to cast a ballot in the 2014 midterm election, she was told she was missing from the rolls. Earlier this year after moving from one county to another, she visited the DMV explicitly to update the address on her voter registration.

“I did the paperwork, but they said they had no record of me registering,” Holverson told ThinkProgress. “I was told I could do a provisional ballot, but they neglected to say that provisional ballots really don’t count. So I’m pissed, very angry. My vote could have been the one that made the difference.”

Holverson is one of several North Carolinians named in a complaint letter from voting rights groups accusing the administration of Republican Governor Pat McCrory of violating the National Voter Registration Act — possibly denying thousands the ability to vote.

. . .

The state’s poorest residents who depend on public assistance have also been disproportionately disenfranchised, according to a related legal complaint. Under federal law, all state offices where residents can sign up for welfare, food stamps, Medicaid, and other support services are also required to provide the opportunity to register to vote or update a registration. Since 1993, the law helped North Carolina increase its voter registrations of public assistance clients sixfold. But according to an investigation by Project Vote, the Southern Coalition for Social Justice, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, and Demos, North Carolina offices have been “systematically failing” to comply in recent years.

Between 2011 and 2014, the number of registrations plummeted 69 percent — from nearly 43,000 a year to just over 13,000. This drop did not happen because fewer residents were applying for public assistance, as those numbers declined by less 25 percent over the same time period. In visits to 19 different public assistance offices in 11 different North Carolina counties, investigators with the voting rights groups found that government workers routinely failed to distribute voter registration applications or ask clients if they needed one. Multiple offices did not even have voter registration forms in the building.


THE REST:

http://thinkprogress.org/election/2015/07/22/3682985/north-carolina-might-violating-federal-registration-laws/
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Between 2011 and 2014, voter applications submitted by NC agencies plummeted by 69% (Original Post) Triana Jul 2015 OP
That's 'cause everyone is now registered! jeff47 Jul 2015 #1
Voter Suppression works Gothmog Jul 2015 #2
Jim Crow good for you and me and the GOP. nt nc4bo Jul 2015 #3
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