CLC Opposes Tennessee’s Proposed Restrictions to Voter Registration Drives

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Proposed new rules are confusing and vague and would deter groups from helping others register to vote through harsh criminal and civil penalties

WASHINGTON – Campaign Legal Center (CLC) and a collective of national civil and voting rights organizations sent a letter to the Tennessee General Assembly asking them to reject bill SB971/HB1079 that would create burdensome requirements, threatening civil and criminal penalties for individuals and groups conducting voter registration drives. The bill, scheduled for a vote in the House Monday, will intimidate groups from conducting community-based drives to avoid the risk of being subject to the bill’s severe penalties.

In a state that struggles with voter registration and turnout, leaders should look for ways to encourage activities like voter registration drives, but these new restrictions will have the exact opposite effect.

The letter outlines several issues that make this bill a threat to efforts to make democracy more accessible to all Americans. The language used in the bill is vague and makes it unclear who must follow the requirements - for example, it heavily penalizes voter registration drives for handing in registration forms “deemed deficient” without explaining clearly who is subject to the rule and what would considered a “deficient” form, and it adds poorly-defined criminal penalties for honest mistakes. Tennessee’s criminal laws already protect voters and prohibit voter registration fraud, making these vague, onerous new restrictions unnecessary.

The bill also requires state-sponsored training without ensuring groups can actually participate, another provision with the threat of criminal prosecution. As written, this bill has no requirement that training be made available on any schedule or timeframe, or that it be made available on-demand online or otherwise.

In the letter, the organizations encouraged policymakers to “instead focus on modernizing Tennessee’s registration and election administration to promote participation and bring more eligible citizens into our democracy.”