Voter Disenfranchisement's Real Female Face

Brentin Mock, contributor to the Nation, spoke with voting-rights "evangelist" Faye Anderson, who said that the focus of the voter-registration movement should be re-evaluated. Instead of concentrating on registering elderly persons, Mock argues, the movement should target middle-aged women without driver's licenses.ย  Suggested Reading New AI TikTok Trend Has Gorillas Posing as Black Women, and…

Brentin Mock, contributor to the Nation, spoke with voting-rights "evangelist" Faye Anderson, who said that the focus of the voter-registration movement should be re-evaluated. Instead of concentrating on registering elderly persons, Mock argues, the movement should target middle-aged women without driver's licenses.ย 

Video will return here when scrolled back into view
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

"Advocates have done themselves a disservice by bringing up these 80- and 90-year-old voters. Those are not the votes who are disproportionately impacted by voter ID laws," said Anderson in a phone interview. "As an advocate you want to influence public opinion and youโ€™re not influencing them if you are putting up the faces of 80- and 90-year-old voters."

Elderly voters losing out on voter participation is a very real thing, as evidenced recently in Wisconsin. But instead, she says advocates should be focused on voters who resemble her: A middle-aged New York transplant living in Philadelphia, who commutes up and down the East Coast, traveling without a driverโ€™s license. Like many New Yorkers, Anderson doesnโ€™t drive so she doesnโ€™t need one. She has a non-driverโ€™s photo identification from New York, and other than that she has a passport. It wasnโ€™t easy getting a New York ID, Anderson told me, and sheโ€™s concerned chiefly with women like her who might also have troubles getting the ID they need to vote, especially if theyโ€™ve been recently married, divorced or if theyโ€™ve moved, all of which could lead to name and address mismatches on Election Day.ย 

The new Pennsylvania photo voter ID law ย is "disenfranchising by design to make voters jump through all these hoops," said Anderson. "Itโ€™s unreasonable that women, with all thatโ€™s going on in their lives, will then have time to sit down and Google โ€˜where do I get my birth certificate,โ€™ โ€˜where do I find my marriage certificate,โ€™ โ€˜where to find the closest social security office,โ€™ the hours theyโ€™re open, how to get there, and once there do they have all the documents they need."ย 

Read Brentin Mock's entire op-ed at the Nation.

Straight From The Root

Sign up for our free daily newsletter.