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Northern Bourbons: A Preliminary Report on the National Voter Registration Act

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2013

Frances Fox Piven
Affiliation:
City University of New York
Richard A. Cloward
Affiliation:
Columbia University

Extract

Since January 1995, when the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) went into effect, people have been registering or updating their voting addresses at the rate of nearly one million per month in 42 states. Based on early figures, we expect that the rolls will rise by 20 million before the 1996 election and 20 million more by the 1998 midterm election when the full four-year drivers' license renewal cycle will be completed. The resulting increase would be far and away the largest among already eligible voters (as contrasted with the enfranchising of new groups, such as women and 18-year-olds) since the personal voter registration system was introduced in the closing decades of the nineteenth century.

The NVRA requires that states offer to register people to vote when they get or renew drivers' licenses (called “motor voter”), or when they apply for AFDC, Food Stamps, Medicaid, WIC, and disability services (called “agency-based” voter registration). Roughly eight million enrolled or updated their voting addresses in the first nine months—four million of them in drivers' license agencies, one million in public assistance agencies, and three million by mail.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The American Political Science Association 1996

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Footnotes

Piven and Cloward formed Human SERVE in 1983 to promote voter registration reform, and they played a critical role in winning the National Voter Registration Act a decade later.

References

National Election Study. 1994 Post-Election Survey. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan.Google Scholar
U.S. Bureau of the Census. 1984. Voting and Registration Highlights from the Current Population Survey: 1964 to 1980. Series P023, No. 131, February. Washington: Bureau of the Census.Google Scholar