Senate Moves To Narrow Voter Registration Laws

How long you can stay active as a voter without using that right may be changing if a bill passed Thursday by the Senate becomes a law. 

How long you can stay active as a voter without using that right may be changing if a bill passed Thursday by the Senate becomes law.  

Senate Bill 622, changes the time period of voting inactivity for removal from voter registration. Currently, a voter can go four years without voting or updating voter information before being considered inactive. This bill moves it to two years. 

For example, if a voter didn’t vote in one presidential election, they could be ineligible to vote in the next presidential election. 

The bill is a use it or lose it voting law. If voters don’t vote for more than two years, they get flagged. 

However, if voters confirm their address or register for a change of address, they will stay registered to vote, and their inactive status will be dropped. Voters can vote in any local, state or federal election or ballot to stay an active voter. 

Lead sponsor of the bill Sen. Eric Tarr, R-Putnam, said the bill is to make sure voters are not registered to vote in two different precincts and to verify voter eligibility. 

“We’ve been working on purging our voter rolls quite a bit,” Tarr said. “I think the first purge we did of 400,000 people who were not eligible to vote in West Virginia who had voter registration. So this bill is about making sure that people who show up to vote are people who are eligible to vote.”  

The bill is similar to a law passed in Ohio that led to a Supreme Court case and nearly 150,000 Ohio voters being purged from the state roll.

Criminalizing Aspects Of Voter Registration Debated In House

The section of House Bill 4017 under debate notes that finding any person who intentionally coerces or offers payment in exchange for a person to register to vote is guilty of a misdemeanor and could be fined and jailed.

Five bills on third reading passed in the House of Delegates Tuesday, including two that fostered some debate over election laws, voting laws and candidate filing periods.    

Criminal actions regarding registering to vote are key to House Bill 4017, modifying certain election laws, early voting laws, and absentee voting laws.

The section under debate notes that finding any person who intentionally coerces or offers payment in exchange for a person to register to vote is guilty of a misdemeanor and could be fined and jailed.

House Minority Leader Sean Hornbuckle, D-Cabell, asked that with no specific definition of the terms coerced or payment, could a college campus voter registration table giving away bottled water and cookies, or the Secretary of State’s high school teen voter registration campaign be seen as criminal acts? 

“This piece of legislation in front of us could potentially not only harm those high school students and the aforementioned college students, this could criminalize our Secretary of State,” Hornbuckle said. “I would urge us, with the language, to slow down and we need to rethink what we’re doing here because it can be problematic.” 

There was no other debate on the floor. House Bill 4017 passed the House by a 90-7 vote. It will become effective Jan. 1, 2025 if it passes the Senate.

Also on third reading, House Bill 4350 removes the ability of political parties to appoint candidates for the primary election in positions where no one has filed. 

Del. Mike Pushkin, D-Kanawha, was among several House Democrats opposing a proposed bill they said benefits incumbency and stifles participation in the elective process.

“This is a bill that only protects incumbency,” Puskin said. “The only people that care about this bill are sitting in this room, or down the hall or in a couple county courthouses across the state. So when you’re voting for this, ask yourself Who are your heroes? Who are you here to serve? Your constituents, the voters who deserve choices, or yourself? I’ll be voting against this bill. It is self serving at its worst.”

However, Del. Adam Vance, R-Wyoming, asked House Judiciary Committee Chair Tom Fast, R-Fayette, if the scope of the bill still contained defined time limits, opportunities and restrictions on filing for political office.

“Are there not filing periods for these candidates to file?” Vance asked Fast.

“There certainly are,” Fast answered. “There’s an election every two years in this state. If I want somebody to run for something, I’ve got two years at least to go to him and talk to him and try to talk with me to run it. I don’t see the problem with this bill and I’ve got two years, four years for a Senate seat and it shouldn’t be extra time to just grab somebody and say, here you’re on the ballot. So I’m gonna be a big yes on this.”

House Bill 4350 passed 79-18 and also now goes to the Senate.

Deadline To Register To Vote In W.Va. Is Tuesday

The deadline has almost arrived to register to vote in the Nov. 8 General Election in West Virginia.

The deadline has almost arrived to register to vote in the Nov. 8 General Election in West Virginia.

A voter registration form must be in the county clerk’s possession by Tuesday for people who register in person, Secretary of State Mac Warner’s office said. Registration may also be completed by mail, and that must be received or postmarked by Tuesday. Voters may also register online by the close of business of their county clerk’s office.

Voters can download a mail-in form, register online or find the county clerk’s contact information at GoVoteWV.com.

Warner says anyone who has moved, changed their name since the last election or wants to change party affiliation may update their registration by Tuesday.

Warner’s office and county clerks around the state held more than 100 voter registration drives during the month of September. A total of 5,326 people in the state registered last month, Warner said.

Absentee voting began Sept. 23. Early in-person voting starts Oct. 26 and continues through Nov. 5.

Voter Registration Push Has Overriding Themes

For some, the push to boost West Virginia voter registration has an overriding theme. What’s consistent is that all involved want to see informed voters going to polling places in November.

For some, the push to boost West Virginia voter registration has an overriding theme. What’s consistent is that all involved want to see informed voters going to polling places in November.

Tucker County Clerk Sherry Simmons proudly said with a population of about 6,800, and more than 5,000 registered to vote, Tucker County led the state in the primaries with a 48 percent turnout. Simmons said that’s because in this tight-knit rural county, they do it right.

“We have very dedicated citizens that registered to vote and change their addresses and change their party affiliation,” Simmons said. “We are active with our school system and we work with our teachers. Everybody does everything right in Tucker County.”

Working hard on voter registration, Secretary of State Mac Warner said informed voters will have more clout this election.

“We never tell people how to vote, but we do want people to be educated on the issues,” Warner said. “This is an off year election, a midterm election, so you usually don’t have the turnout that you would in a presidential year. If you do vote, your vote is going to have more of a proportional impact, you’re going to have a larger say.”

Do Simmons and Warner think the recent abortion legislation passed into law will prompt more West Virginia women to register and vote?

“That is their personal opinion. I feel that, yes, it could,” Simmons said.

“I think there’s some indication of that,” Warner said.

Del. Danielle Walker, D-Monongalia, is taking Secretary Warner’s advice to heart. The vice-chair of the West Virginia Democratic Party is up for re-election, but said she’s spending her campaign time getting people registered to vote.

“We have to channel our outrage due to the impeachment of reproductive freedom. And so we’re doing that by taking an opportunity to tell folks you have a chance to make a difference,” Walker said. “Your voice matters, Your vote matters, and every election matters.”

Walker said it’s not about more women expected to register and vote. She calls it the Roevember election.

“This is not just a women’s issue. This is a human rights issue. And we have to include every person,” Walker said. “There’s males that are upset about this deal. And there’s also non-binary and trans folks that we must not exclude out of this conversation. So everybody is going to stroll to the polls in November.”

Putnam County Clerk Brian Wood, president of the West Virginia County Clerk’s Association, had a caution for campaign candidates.

“Be on your best behavior, give respect to voters, allow privacy in their space,” Wood said. “Obviously with politics you want to get your message out, we understand that. We just want to make sure you understand where that line is at, so there’s no voter intimidation.”

Wood said clerk’s office staffers and poll workers don’t want to influence election outcomes one way or another. He agreed that all involved want informed voters casting ballots.

Last Chance To Register To Vote In The General Election In W.Va.

The final day to register to vote in West Virginia’s Nov. 3 general election is Tuesday Oct. 13.

While state code calls for the deadline to be the close of business, the West Virginia Secretary of State’s office said online registrations — completed after business hours but before midnight — fall to the discretion of county clerks.

Those wishing to register in person must do so before their local county clerk’s office closes for the day. Registrations submitted by mail must be postmarked on or before Oct. 13.

The secretary of state’s office reports there are more than 1.2 million registered voters in West Virginia.

“We are asking all voters to make a plan to vote,” said Secretary of State Mac Warner last week in a news release. “Encourage your family members, friends and neighbors to make a plan as well.”

In the past three years, the office has registered more than 200,000 new voters, while 192,000 deceased, duplicate, out of state and convicted felon registration files have been cancelled from the Statewide Voter Registration System, according to the secretary of state’s office.

Early in-person voting begins next week on Oct. 21 and runs through Oct. 31. The last day to request an absentee ballot is Oct. 28.

Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 3.

West Virginia Secretary Of State Reports Record Month For Voter Registrations

West Virginia election officials say a record 8,020 people registered to vote in September. 

 

Secretary of State Mac Warner on Thursday said the figure set a new state record for voter registration transactions in a single month. The tally was boosted by the registration of nearly 3,000 high school students.

 

A national group of secretaries of state deemed September as national voter registration month to encourage election participation.

 

The state has set up an online portal where eligible voters can register at govotewv.com.

 

Warner says more than 150,000 West Virginians have registered since he took office in 2017.

 

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