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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsJimmy Carter Tried to Make It Easier to Vote in 1977 The Right Stopped Him With the Same Arguments
Arguments Its Using Today
On March 22, 1977, newly-elected president Jimmy Carter sent a letter to Congress recommending a package of electoral reforms. The president was concerned that America ranked twenty-first in voter participation among the worlds democracies. He argued that the problem was not voter apathy but that millions of Americans are prevented or discouraged from voting in every election by antiquated and overly restrictive voter registration lawsa fact proven by the record rates of participation in 1976 in states like Minnesota, Wisconsin, and North Dakota that let voters register on Election Day. Carter recommended same-day registration be adopted universallytempering concerns that such measures might increase opportunities for fraud by increasing penalties against it to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.
He asked for $25 million to help states comply, an expansion to congressional elections of the current system of federal matching funds for presidential campaigns, and closing a loophole in campaign finance law that advantaged rich contenders by allowing them to evade spending limits if they funded their own campaigns. He proposed revising the Hatch Act to allow federal employees not in sensitive positions the same rights of political participation as everyone else when not on the job. Most radically, he recommended a constitutional amendment to scrap the Electoral College, which, three times so far, had selected as president a candidate who had received fewer votes than his opponent.
It was among the most sweeping political reform proposals in U.S. historyand soon afterward, legislators from both parties stood together at a news briefing to endorse all or most of it. The bill for universal registration, which RNC chairman Brock called a Republican concept, was cosponsored by four Republicans. Senator Baker suggested going even further by making Election Day a national holiday, keeping polls open twenty-four hours, and instituting automatic registration. House minority leader John Rhodes, the conservative disciple of Barry Goldwater, predicted the proposal would pass in substantially the same form with a lot of Republican support, including my own.
He asked for $25 million to help states comply, an expansion to congressional elections of the current system of federal matching funds for presidential campaigns, and closing a loophole in campaign finance law that advantaged rich contenders by allowing them to evade spending limits if they funded their own campaigns. He proposed revising the Hatch Act to allow federal employees not in sensitive positions the same rights of political participation as everyone else when not on the job. Most radically, he recommended a constitutional amendment to scrap the Electoral College, which, three times so far, had selected as president a candidate who had received fewer votes than his opponent.
It was among the most sweeping political reform proposals in U.S. historyand soon afterward, legislators from both parties stood together at a news briefing to endorse all or most of it. The bill for universal registration, which RNC chairman Brock called a Republican concept, was cosponsored by four Republicans. Senator Baker suggested going even further by making Election Day a national holiday, keeping polls open twenty-four hours, and instituting automatic registration. House minority leader John Rhodes, the conservative disciple of Barry Goldwater, predicted the proposal would pass in substantially the same form with a lot of Republican support, including my own.
https://time.com/5881305/president-carter-election-reform/?amp=true&__twitter_impression=true&utm_source=reddit.com
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Jimmy Carter Tried to Make It Easier to Vote in 1977 The Right Stopped Him With the Same Arguments (Original Post)
mucifer
Aug 2020
OP
JonLP24
(29,322 posts)1. That was the 70s
Voting has become even more restrictive in the last 15 years.
lark
(23,102 posts)2. Early voting is one excellent innovation we didn't have in the 70's.
Signature matching and always having to show your FL ID, along, of course, with the recent degradation of the post offices' ability to deliver mail are some of the bad things we now have to deal with.
Early voting in FL is wonderful, except it now doesn't last long enough, thanks Voldemort. Still, 3 weeks early, M-S, 10-6, and being able to vote at all libraries, and having no harassment or lines = I love early voting.
WhiteTara
(29,716 posts)3. Penny wise and pound foolish
what was $25million then is $25billion now.