Article de blog
L’inscription automatique des électeurs fonctionne… et voici les preuves qui le prouvent
Le vote est l'un des moyens fondamentaux par lesquels les Américains peuvent faire entendre leur voix dans notre démocratie. Mais trop souvent, le processus d'inscription sur les listes électorales peut être délicat, déroutant et compliqué. C'est l'une des raisons pour lesquelles Common Cause a lancé une campagne nationale pour faire pression en faveur d'une nouvelle réforme innovante visant à rendre le processus d'inscription des électeurs plus pratique et plus sûr. Il s'agit de l'inscription automatique des électeurs (AVR).
It works like this: when you do business with certain government agencies, like getting your drivers’ licenses from the DMV, you will be automatically registered to vote unless you decide to opt-out. It’s a simple, convenient way to get more eligible citizens registered to vote so they have the opportunity to make their voices heard. By consolidating the number of different places a state keeps records, AVR can also modernize our voter registration systems so they are more secure and save the state money.
Thirteen states plus Washington, DC have adopted some form of automatic voter registration. Massachusetts is on the verge of being the 14ème state, with a bipartisan AVR bill waiting to be signed by Gov. Massachusetts. Additionally, an AVR measure is on the ballot this year in Nevada and could also be on the ballot in Michigan.
So, you may be asking: does automatic voter registration really work? The answer is yes. States that have already implemented AVR programs have released data that shows an increase in the number of people who have taken advantage of this new program. Here are a few examples:
Dans Illinois, the state Board of Elections recently announced that 20,000 people have updated their voter registration or registered to vote for the first time in just the first three weeks since implementing the AVR program.
Dans Vermont, 12,344 voter registrations were processed or updated at the DMV in the first six months of the program in 2017. This is compared to 7,626 registrations processed during the same time period without AVR in 2016, which is significant since 2016 was an election year and 2017 was not.
Dans Oregon, the first state to pass AVR, 375,000 new voters registered to vote in the first 18 months of implementing the program.
Dans Californie, the DMV processed nearly 800,000 voter registration transactions in just the first three months of the state’s AVR-style Motor Voter program. Those transactions include 393,020 people re-registering to vote, 259,294 people registering as new voters, and 120,016 updating their addresses.
It’s clear that automatic voter registration works. It’s time for more states to reduce the barriers that prevent too many eligible Americans from voting and help build a stronger democracy and election system that works for all voters.