A trio of state Senators introduced a bill this week that hits each of the goals of the Art Pope-Civitas-Americans for Prosperity agenda for voting: Senate Bill 657 would kill pre-registration for teenagers, repeal Same Day Registration, cut down the days and hours for in-person Early Voting, cripple out-of-precinct provisional voting, but allow organized campaigns for mail-in absentee voting, which is the one area where Republicans consistently out-perform Democrats. Two of the Republican bill sponsors (Sen. Ralph Hise and Sen. Jim Davis) gained their election largely because they ranked Number 1 and Number 2 in receiving the most support from the Civitas-AFP-Pope-funded outside electioneering groups and Pope family contributions; they got an astonishing $580,000 worth of support. Rock the Vote provides a useful summary of this bill, calling it “A New Low in North Carolina” that will particularly harm young voters. Meanwhile, a new report analyzing first-time voters in 2008 shows that nearly two thirds were under age 30 and 54% were white and had some college education – but the growth in their numbers over 2004 came from first-time voters who were non-white and never attended college. The liberal leanings of first-time voters, particularly in 2008, may be one reason the Pope-Civitas conservatives in the NC General Assembly are so hostile to youth civic engagement.
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Posted on April 21st, 2011
This entry was posted on Thursday, April 21st, 2011 at 11:01 am
Filed under Civic Engagement, Link-of-the-Day, Voting Rights, Youth Vote.
