When it comes to expanding voter access, most often the conversation centers around allowing early voting or establishing automatic voting registration. But a forum at the University of Delaware Tuesday focused instead on making voting more accessible for those with disabilities. “We still have this cultural lag where we don’t really expect people with disabilities to be voters,” said Rabia Belt, historian and assistant professor at Stanford Law School. “It’s still quite difficult for people to be able to access polling places, people to receive the accommodations that are legally mandated.” The forum organized by UD’s Center for Disabilities Studies looked at how people with disabilities are underrepresented at the polls.
Michelle Bishop of the National Disability Rights Network cited a Government Accountability Office study of the 2016 election that showed that only 40 percent of polling places had no potential impediments for voters with disabilities. “That’s still less than half, so that’s not good news,” Bishop said. It does, however, represent an improvement since 2000.
“We’re still going in the right direction, very slowly, but in the right direction,” she said.
Still, if more than half of all polling places in the U.S. have impediments for voters with disabilities, that should be considered voter suppression, Bishop said. “If 60 percent of America’s polling places were only accessible to men, if 60 percent of America’s polling places were only accessible to people who were white, we would not let that stand,” she said.
Full Article: Majority of disabled voters in U.S. faced challenges in casting ballots in ’16 : Politics & Policy : WHYY.