Project Vote Applauds Justice Department Enforcement of NVRA in Illinois

By Project Vote December 19, 2008
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WASHINGTON, DC – Following an investigation that found evidence of widespread violations, the Department of Justice (DOJ) today announced an agreement to bring the State of Illinois into compliance with provisions of the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA), which requires state-funded public assistance agencies to offer voter registration services to clients. Nicole Kovite, director of Project Vote’s NVRA Implementation Project, issued the following statement in response:

“Project Vote joins voting rights advocates across the country in commending the Justice Department and the state of Illinois for taking this first step to ensure that the Illinois Department of Human Security (DHS) is doing right by low-income Illinois voters.

Low-income Americans are underrepresented at the voting booth, and the public agency provisions of the NVRA are designed to reach out to these populations through agencies providing food stamps, TANF, disability services, and other public assistance services. In the first two years that the NVRA was in effect—1995-1996—it resulted in over 2.5 million registrations nationwide.

Unfortunately, in the years since, too many states—including Illinois—have been neglecting these federal requirements. A 2008 study by Project Vote and Demos found that registrations through public assistance agencies have fallen an alarming 80 percent, to just over half a million in 2005-2006. Registrations in Illinois—never as high as they should have been for a state of its size—fell 74 percent in the same time period. Hundreds of thousands of low-income adult citizens in Illinois are not registered to vote and an equally large number of applications for public aid are filed in the state each year.

Project Vote has surveyed a number of states over the past several years to determine current levels of compliance with the NVRA. Our ongoing survey program reveals widespread noncompliance. These violations of the NVRA mean that states are not only missing the opportunity to register millions of low-income Americans every year, but they are also leaving themselves vulnerable to investigation and expensive litigation. Earlier this year the DOJ reached a similar agreement with the state of Arizona over non-compliance issues, and Project Vote has joined other advocacy organizations in bringing lawsuits against the Missouri Department of Social Services (DSS) and the Ohio Secretary of State for similar NVRA violations. Project Vote has also sent letters to New Mexico, Florida, and Colorado notifying those states of their noncompliance with the law and subsequent vulnerability to litigation.

Project Vote has been working to bring many of these noncompliant states into compliance through technical assistance, advocacy, and litigation. We have long advocated on the federal level for the Justice Department to investigate violations of the NVRA and take steps to ensure that public-assistance clients have the access to voter registration to which they are legally entitled.

Today’s agreement is an important first step. Project Vote applauds the DOJ for enforcing this essential federal law, and we commend the state of Illinois for agreeing to fulfill its obligations to help public assistance clients register to vote.”

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