Nearly 30,000 Low-Income Louisianans Apply to Register to Vote

By Project Vote July 17, 2013
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Because of a Successful Lawsuit by Voting Rights Groups, Louisiana Public Agencies Show Significant Gains in Voter Registration
 
BATON ROUGE – Nearly 30,000 low-income Louisianans have recently applied to register to vote at public agency offices, according to a new report released by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC). This represents a dramatic increase in applications and is the result of a successful lawsuit brought by voting rights groups to bring the state into compliance with the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) of 1993. 

The NVRA requires that public agencies that provide public assistance, such as food stamps, Medicaid, and other programs, also proactively offer their clients the opportunity to register to vote every time they apply for benefits, recertify, or change their addresses. In 2011, Project Vote and its partners began investigating Louisiana’s dismal voter registration numbers at public agencies, which suggested that the state was failing to comply with this important law. 
 
In 1995–1996, the first two years of NVRA implementation, Louisiana public agencies registered nearly 75,000 citizens. Over the next 13 years, however, registrations had dropped 88 percent. Though the numbers of participants in Louisiana’s food stamp and Medicaid programs remained consistently high, only approximately 3,000 people per year submitted registration applications through public agencies in 2009–2010. 
 
Project Vote and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDF) filed suit in April 2011 on behalf of the Louisiana State Conference of the NAACP and an individual SNAP (food stamp) applicant seeking to bring Louisiana into compliance with the NVRA. In 2012, a federal judge ruled in favor of the plaintiffs.  Project Vote and LDF were assisted in this effort by local Attorney Ron Wilson and the pro bono legal services of the law firm Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson, LLP.
 
Now, new data compiled and released by the EAC show that the improved compliance brought about as a result of the lawsuit is working. Statewide, 29,233 voter registration applications were submitted by public agency clients between 2011 and 2012. This represents a dramatic increase of 384 percent over the previous two-year period.
 
“These data show that Louisianans want to register and will register to vote when given the opportunity,” says Sarah Brannon, director of Project Vote’s Public Agency Voter Registration Program. “The goal of the NVRA was to make voter registration more accessible and to reach those Americans who have been historically underrepresented in the electorate.”
 
About the NVRA and the Public Agency Voter Registration Program
Widely known as the “motor voter” law, the NVRA was passed in 1993. Among its other provisions, it required voter registration be offered at motor vehicle offices and agencies providing public assistance. Over 140 million Americans have applied to register through their Department of Motor Vehicles and public agencies since the law was first implemented in 1995. 
 
However, after initial implementation saw great gains in voter registration applications, a worrisome trend of drop offs in registrations at public agencies followed as states began ignoring the requirements of the NVRA. Project Vote and allies, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law and Dēmos, created the Public Agency Voter Registration Program to ensure that voter registration at public agencies would occur in compliance with the law. Working with other voting rights groups and pro-bono legal counsel, the project works to ensure through advocacy, technical assistance, and litigation that public assistance agency clients—the poorest and most marginalized residents—are offered their legally-guaranteed opportunity to register to vote. 
 
Over nearly a decade, Project Vote and allies have taken measures in dozens of states, through partnerships or legal action, to bring the states into compliance. This work has resulted in 1.8 million more Americans applying to be registered to vote.
 
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