HuffPost: Rhode Island Was The Only Democratic State That Didn’t Expand Voting Rights In 2021

HuffPost: Rhode Island Was The Only Democratic State That Didn’t Expand Voting Rights In 2021

“We’re an outlier in that we didn’t do anything this year, but it’s not that surprising because New England has been dragging on this issue for a long time,” Marion said. “Prior to the pandemic, we weren’t building the infrastructure necessary to push this,” Marion said. “We were working on voting rights but we weren’t building as much as we should have.”

The COVID-19 pandemic led almost every state to expand voting rules to enable safe access to the polls in 2020. Those emergency rule changes or other expansions of voting rights then became permanent in every state where Democrats controlled the state legislature, save for one: Rhode Island.

So why didn’t Rhode Island Democrats, with control of the governorship and state legislature, expand voting rights like every other state that Democrats run?

The answer lies both in the state’s history of skepticism for expanding voter access and the conservative nature of the state Democratic Party.

“Rhode Island doesn’t have a strong history of being a pro-voting rights state,” said John Marion, executive director of Common Cause RI, a nonpartisan nonprofit leading a new voting rights coalition in the state.

First of all, Rhode Islanders and state politicians have long been wary of measures like voting by mail, early in-person voting and same-day voter registration.

According to Marion, this skepticism stems both from the state’s embrace of in-person Election Day voting due to the strong communitarian traditions in New England politics — prior to 2020, 90% of voters cast a ballot in-person on Election Day — and to a decades-old history of corrupt machine politics exemplified by the late Providence mayor, Vincent “Buddy” Cianci, who served five years in prison on federal corruption charges and boasted in his memoir of manipulating voters to get them to cast absentee ballots for him.

“We’re an outlier in that we didn’t do anything this year, but it’s not that surprising because New England has been dragging on this issue for a long time,” Marion said.

“Prior to the pandemic, we weren’t building the infrastructure necessary to push this,” Marion said. “We were working on voting rights but we weren’t building as much as we should have.”

Voting rights advocates formed a new coalition called Let RI Vote to help build public support for reforms in March. The coalition includes state and local chapters of Common Cause, the NAACP, the ACLU, the League of Women Voters and College Democrats, among others, and national voting rights groups like the National Vote at Home Institute and Represent.Us. …

Let RI Vote backs two election bills aimed at increasing voter access. The first is an omnibus bill that codifies many of the emergency pandemic voting changes into law and makes other changes advancing voter access and streamlining election administration. The other bill proposes a constitutional amendment to eliminate the state’s restrictive voter registration deadline, which currently requires voters to register 30 days before an election. …

Euer and Marion are both fairly confident that the legislature will pass both election bills in 2022.