‘pay to play’, there is no equality of participation.
It isn’t just money. In my state – which is unfortunately not an outlier – the legislature has used its power to make it more difficult to vote.
We have one of the strictest Voter ID laws in the nation – in order to cast a ballot, you must not only have a government-issued picture ID, that ID must have an expiration date. (This excludes the IDs issued by state universities, which lack an expiration date.)
Middle-class folks assume that it’s simple enough to obtain such identification, but for poorer people – particularly older black citizens who were born at home and lack a birth certificate – getting the necessary documentation can be both onerous and costly. (Despite pious rhetoric about deterring ‘voter fraud’, scholars agree that the incidence of fraudulent in-person voting is virtually nil.)
My state legislature has also declined to enact other measures that encourage or facilitate voting by working-class Americans: keeping the polls open past six, establishing convenient voting centres, expanding early voting.
It’s bad enough that lawmakers see fit to erect barriers to voting rather than making it easier. But the most serious denial of democratic equality comes through partisan gerrymandering that produces an abundance of ‘safe’ seats and eliminates voter choice.
Increasingly, especially at the state level, our legislators choose their voters – the voters don’t choose their representatives. So even when disadvantaged folks make it past the obstacles and manage to cast their ballots, they often find they are given no meaningful choice. A growing number of elections are uncontested.
The result of all this is a particularly pernicious form of inequality – the people who would benefit most from the election of candidates willing to work for legal and/or economic equality – have less access, less influence and less voice.
Originally appeared as: ‘Is political inequality the worst kind?’. Courtesy: Commondreams.org