All but lost in the shadow of major contests for U.S. Senate and governor, voters in some battleground states will be deciding ballot that could reshape the way they vote in the next presidential election.
In Arizona, scene of the closest presidential contest in 2020, the question is whether to require more identification to vote in the future. In Michigan, another swing state, voters will consider whether to make it easier to cast early ballots.
Voting-related proposals will be on the ballot in several other states, including a measure to adopt ranked-choice voting in Nevada that 鈥 if approved this year 鈥 would need a second vote in 2024 to take effect."
Most of the measures are garnering little attention but could have profound effects on voting in some of the most politically competitive states for years to come. They mark an escalation of what voting expert Jon Sherman describes as 鈥渢he voting wars鈥 鈥 battles between Democrats, Republicans and activist groups over laws specifying how people register, obtain mail-in ballots, prove their identity and cast ballots.
鈥淭he parties and their allies are fighting over every last voting rule and trying to make predictions about how they think it will help or hurt their chances of winning, particularly in closely competitive states," said Sherman, litigation director and senior counsel at the Fair Elections Center, a nonprofit that advocates for voting access.
Efforts to change voting laws ramped up after the 2000 presidential election, when a U.S. Supreme Court decision in Florida's exceptionally close race gave Republican George W. Bush the victory over Democrat Al Gore. It intensified after the 2020 election, as Republican President Donald Trump refused to acknowledge his loss to Democrat Joe Biden while pressing and some Republican-led states responded by passing restrictive voting laws.
Arizona, which Biden won by about 10,500 votes, was one center of controversy. After a six-month review focused on Arizona's largest county, a ended up with vote results confirming Democrat Biden's victory.
Republicans who control the Legislature subsequently that would strengthen voter identification laws. It would require people voting in person to show a photo ID, and eliminate a current alternative of providing two documents bearing a person's name and address, such as a recent utility bill and bank statement.
People voting with mailed ballots 鈥 the vast majority in Arizona 鈥 would have to list their date of birth and either their driver鈥檚 license number, a state identification number or the last four digits of their Social Security number.
Republican state Sen. J.D. Mesnard, who sponsored the measure, said the intent is to 鈥渕ake the election as secure as possible鈥 while addressing 鈥渁 growing crisis in confidence" that could discourage some people from voting.
But rather than reassuring voters, tougher ID requirements could dissuade some from voting at all and actually lead to fraud by exposing personal information, said Darrell Hill, policy director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona, which opposes the measure.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e opening people up to greater potential identity theft,鈥 Hill said.
Only a few states 鈥 Georgia, Minnesota, Ohio 鈥 have similar proof-of-identity measures for mailed ballots, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Arkansas requires voters to provide a copy of a photo ID when returning a mailed ballot.
In Michigan next month, a would pre-empt Republican attempts to tighten photo identification laws by amending the state Constitution to include the current alternative of signing an affidavit. It also would expand early voting options, require state-funded return postage and drop boxes for absentee ballots, and specify that the Board of State Canvassers has only a 鈥渃lerical, nondiscretionary鈥 duty to certify election results.
Trump allies had the 2020 results.
The goal of the new initiative is to 鈥渆nhance the integrity and security of the elections by sort of modernizing how they鈥檙e administered and making them more accessible," said Khalilah Spencer, president of Promote the Vote, which backs the measure.
On the other side, Michigan Republican Party spokesman Gustavo Portela said the initiative "opens the door up for fraud鈥 through the combination of early voting and a constitutional exception to showing photo ID.
Just four states 鈥 Alabama, 小蓝视频icut, Mississippi and New Hampshire 鈥 lack an in-person early voting option for all voters. 小蓝视频icut's November ballot will feature a proposed constitutional amendment authorizing the Democratic-led General Assembly to create an early voting law. A similar ballot proposal failed in 2014.
Supporters in 小蓝视频icut hope this time is different 鈥 both because the new version is more clearly written and because the vote comes after the coronavirus pandemic heightened awareness about early voting.
鈥淭he idea that everybody has free time on a Tuesday between 6 a.m. and 8 p.m. -- and that鈥檚 their only opportunity to participate in our democracy -- is a little dated,鈥 said Democratic state Sen. Mae Flexer, co-chair of the 小蓝视频icut legislative committee that sponsored the measure.
In Nebraska, Republicans haven't been able to get a voter photo ID bill through the nonpartisan Legislature. But it will appear on the November ballot, thanks to bankrolled by Marlene Ricketts, the mother of term-limited Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts.
Civic Nebraska, a voting rights group opposed to the measure, describes it as 鈥渁 solution in search of a problem.鈥
鈥淭here鈥檚 not an iota of evidence in Nebraska that says we would need this extra step" to vote, said Civic Nebraska spokesman Steve Smith.
Gov. Ricketts acknowledged during a recent radio call-in show that there hasn't been much election fraud. But he said 鈥渙ne of the things that came out of the 2020 election is that people had concern about the integrity of our voting systems.鈥
There is of widespread fraud in the Judges have turned away by Trump and his allies, multiple have the results, and Trump's own concluded the election outcome was accurate.
Nevada's proposed constitutional amendment would advance the top five vote-getters in an open primary. It then would use ranked-choice voting to determine the winner of the general election. If no candidate received a majority on the first count, the votes for the bottom candidate would be reassigned to voters' next preferences until one candidate has a majority.
A similar system already exists for some elections in Maine, where . Ranked-choice voting also began this year in Alaska. Former Republican Gov. Sarah Palin derided it as 鈥渃razy, convoluted, confusing鈥 after in August.
Nevada's ranked-choice initiative has been opposed by majority Democrats, including Gov. Steve Sisolak, who said it "would make our system confusing, error-prone, and exclusionary.鈥
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David A. Lieb, The Associated Press