Election Day in America brought its familiar mix of misery and allegations of mischief: Aging voting machines crashed; rain-soaked citizens stood in endless lines; laws that many regarded as attempts to suppress turnout among people of color led to both confusion at the polls and angry calls for recounts and investigations. The root causes have been at play for years. The neglect of America’s elections infrastructure, after all, has persisted, and all levels of government are responsible. And since the Supreme Court in 2013 voided a key part of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, local governments have been emboldened in crafting hotly debated requirements for people to cast their ballots. But that is not the whole story of what happened last Tuesday. A handful of states had ballot measures aimed at making it easier for people to vote or designed to take some of the politics out of how the country’s electoral districts are drawn up. In nearly every case, Americans seized the opportunity — with what the vote totals suggest was enthusiasm.
Three states passed same-day or automatic voter registration measures. Voters across the country complained of confusing registration requirements and deadlines, or of arriving at their polling place to find they were no longer on the rolls there. In two states, this will cease to be a problem. Maryland and Michigan will now allow their citizens to register on the day they vote. Michigan and Nevada will now allow citizens to register to vote automatically when they interact with a state office, such as applying for a driver’s license, which will speed up the process and reduce registration errors.
In Colorado, Michigan and Missouri, voters overwhelmingly approved measures that aim to limit or end gerrymandering, the process by which the party in power can draw districts to boost its chances of winning. They did so in two ways: either by empowering an independent commission to draw the boundaries or curtailing the power of a single party to draw the lines on its own.
These states are not blue bastions, where such votes might be expected. Utah, too, approved an independent commission to draw its district lines, though by a narrower margin. And while such measures have not always been effective — the independent commissions can wind up not so independent, as happened in California — they often do address the frustration felt by many voters who think their districts have been manipulated.
Full Article: Election Day Was Filled With Frustrations, Claims of… — ProPublica.