In some US cities, a revived push to let immigrants vote
Most limit such voting to local elections and legal immigrants. But state legislatures often intercede.
from the June 18, 2007 edition
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Similar efforts in San Francisco and Washington, D.C., have stalled.
Critics find the idea ludicrous.
"Most Americans regard that as an outrageous notion, that somebody who is not a citizen of the country would be allowed to vote," says Steve Kropper, co-chair of Massachusetts Coalition for Immigration Reform, an organization that seeks to reduce immigration.
Some advocates want to limit voting rights to legal immigrants who intend to become citizens but haven't completed the process. Because naturalization takes on average eight years, the Migration Policy Institute reports, parents could see their 10-year-old graduate from high school before having a say in the public school system.
School-related voting
Education is often parents' top concern, so some initiatives have limited immigrants' votes to school-related issues. Since 1988, Chicago has allowed immigrant parents of schoolchildren to vote in school-board elections, regardless of legal status. New York City school boards, which existed from 1969 to 2003, did the same.
History supports noncitizen voting, says Ron Hayduk, codirector of the Immigrant Voting Project and author of "Democracy for All: Restoring Immigrant Voting Rights in the United States." Letting immigrants vote was a routine practice in 40 US states and territories for 150 years, he says, until the antiimmigrant backlash around the 1920s.
The prevailing but incorrect notion is that voting is inherently linked to citizenship, Mr. Hayduk says, but actually it has been linked to race, gender, and land ownership. Blacks and women had to fight for the vote, he notes.
Given that context, Hayduk sees noncitizen voting as a natural progression of democratic evolution, or "the suffrage movement of our day."
Critics' objection: Citizens' votes diluted
But enfranchising noncitizens would unfairly dilute the strength of citizens' votes, says one critic, Steve Cameron, director of research at the Washington-based Center for Immigration Studies.
He sees the rollback of voting rights a century ago as a period of electoral reform, not xenophobic or nativist backlash. In those decades, the secret ballot was introduced and political parties' influence restrained. "The elimination of noncitizen voting was done in that context, [as] part of an effort to clean up elections," he says.
For opponents, reviving the practice is just another step in accommodating unnecessary – and sometimes unlawful – immigrants. "The whole issue comes up [as] a direct consequence of large-scale immigration," Mr. Cameron continues. "If you had less immigration, legal or illegal, it would go away."
In the current immigration climate, many politicians, especially those above the local level, prefer to avoid the issue.
"If you're running for the school board in a really liberal area, yeah, you can say it. If you've got larger political ambitions, … you don't really want to be that candidate," says Cameron.
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