Thursday, September 25, 2008

No Home, No Vote

I just read a very disturbing article in New York Times about Americans losing their right to vote because they have lost their homes in the current financial crisis. Lack of a valid address equals not being able to register to vote. And this does not just apply to homeless persons but also to people who have a new place to live but have not had the time - or thought (I guess you have other things on your mind when the bank takes your house) - to re-register under the new address.

"More than a million people have lost their homes through foreclosure in the last two years, and many of them are still registered to vote at the address of the home they lost. Now election officials and voting rights groups are struggling to prevent thousands of them from losing their vote when they go to the polls in November.

Many of these voters will be disqualified at the polls because, in the tumult of their foreclosure, they neglected to tell their election board of their new address. Some could be forced to vote with a provisional ballot or challenged by partisan poll watchers, a particular concern among Democrats who fear that poor voters will be singled out. That could add confusion and stretch out lines that are already expected to be long because of unprecedented turnout."

Full article here.

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