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Jill Z's avatar

In regard to your tweet about Dems not being in touch with the country's views on citizenship and your response that NYC says "hold my beer" - I found this article by Democracy Docket interesting - https://www.democracydocket.com/news/understanding-voting-rights-for-non-citizens

Selected Quotes from the article:

The New York City Council is set to approve a bill, Intro 1867, that allows legal permanent residents and those with work authorizations to vote in municipal elections and register as members of political parties. The work authorization category includes Dreamers, people enrolled in Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), or people with Temporary Protected Status. An individual must be a resident of New York City for at least 30 days before the election to qualify as a municipal voter. Notably, Intro 1867 does not expand voting rights to all non-citizens — it does not include undocumented immigrants or people with short-term visas (tourists, for example).

Intro 1867 authorizes qualified non-citizens to vote in municipal elections only. This means the new voters can take part in elections for New York City offices, including mayor, city council, comptroller, public advocate, borough president and local ballot measures. The non-citizen voters will not be eligible to vote in federal elections nor in statewide elections.

As of June 2021, 14 municipalities across the U.S. permit non-citizens to vote in local elections. 11 of these municipalities are in Maryland, two in Vermont and one in California. In 2016, voters in San Francisco approved Proposition N, which permits non-citizen parents of children in public schools to vote in school board elections. Most recently, two Vermont cities, including the capital Montpelier, changed their city charters to allow non-citizen residents to vote in local elections. While Gov. Phil Scott (R) vetoed the plan, the Democratic-controlled state Legislature overrode that veto.

Laws that expand voting rights to certain non-citizens are often inaccurately characterized by opponents, either in defining which non-citizens can vote or in what type of elections.

Proponents (say): “These are residents of our city who live here, work here, go to school here, raise families here, and pay taxes here. They deserve to have a say in the direction of our city,” writes the Our City, Our Vote campaign. The new municipal voters would be composed of parents who send their children to public schools and homeowners, renters and business owners who want a say in the neighborhood policies. It’s also worth noting non-citizens in New York City have been on the frontlines during the pandemic, keeping the city running and New Yorkers healthy. Additionally, legal residents are required to pay taxes, even if they are not citizens. In New York City, that amounts to billions of dollars per year of “taxation without representation.”

Tali Farhadian Weinstein, a candidate in the 2021 election for New York county district attorney, also emphasized the long wait periods and administrative backlogs that lock residents out of the political process while waiting for their citizenship. “My dad was 30 years old when he came to this country,” Farhadian Weinstein writes. “Although my parents quickly got authorization to work here, my dad turned 45 before he became a citizen and could cast his first vote.”

In contrast to Republican voter suppression laws across the country, New York City is looking to expand voting rights and include more people in the political process. It is still a very rare step for a municipality to proactively implement, but nonetheless raises important questions about the country’s ideals of citizenship, representation and who gets a say in the policy that impacts everyday life.

My opinion - I am not a far left progressive (after all I subscribe to Bulwark!) - but I like to sample multiple sides of an argument and I have to say I am sympathetic to the idea that people who pay taxes should have some level of voice in their community.

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Edward's avatar

Two quick comments about today's Shots. First, it would be nice if Democrats recognized that Hispanic is not a race but an ethnicity and that a majority of Hispanics likely identify as being White. (Bonus if they recognized how religious most Black and Hispanics are, compared to their Woke White brethren). Second, NYC allowing noncitizens to vote is not only politically tone deaf but also amusing since the current NYC Board of Elections is a certified sh!tshow. If you cannot run good elections for your current voting population, complicating it by adding a whole new class of voters--who can only vote in some elections--is a recipe for disaster.

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