News Local/State

Rauner Signs Automatic Voter Registration Bill

 
Gov. Bruce Rauner

Governor Bruce Rauner speaks on the signing of Illinois' automatic voter registration bill at a ceremony held Monday at the Harold Washington Cultural Center in Chicago IL Dept. of Central Management Services

Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner signed a measure Monday allowing automatic voter registration in Illinois. Illinois joins more than half a dozen other states with some form of automatic registration, which proponents say boosts civic participation. 

“This (SB1933) is good bipartisan legislation and it addresses the fundamental fact that the right to vote is foundational for the rights of Americans in our democracy,” Rauner aid at a Chicago bill signing ceremony attended by voter rights groups and Democratic lawmakers. “We as a people need to do everything we can to knock down barriers, remove hurdles for all those who are eligible to vote, to be able to vote.”

He said the new law addressed his previous concerns about fraud and errors. 

Democratic state senator Andy Manar of Bunker Hill was the chief sponsor of the measure, which passed both chambers without a single “nay” vote, and just a handful of lawmakers not voting.

“The bipartisan vote that was taken on this legislation was, when you think about it, quite stunning, especially given the dynamic of what’s happening in Springfield today”, said Manar.

Under the Illinois measure, eligible individuals will be automatically registered unless they opt out when they visit Secretary of State offices for drivers' license services and other state agencies. The measure had wide bipartisan support in the Democrat-majority Legislature. 

The law takes effect immediately, but will be implemented in phases. 

Most of the changes will take place ahead of the November 2018 election when Rauner is seeking a second term, including a major update of voter files and registrations through the Secretary of State's offices. Other agencies will be on board by July 2019. 

Legislators approved a previous version of the bill last year, but Rauner vetoed it over concerns it didn't do enough to safeguard against voter fraud. 

Supporters, including election officials and public interest groups statewide, said it will modernize the system, save money and improve turnout in elections.

“We'll have more people registered everywhere in Illinois. We'll have less paperwork. We'll have fewer people trying to figure out last-minute registrations in the final weeks before an election,” Chicago Election Board Commissioner Jonathan Swain said in a statement. “Everybody wins in this system.”

Some opponents had initially raised concerns about it leading to registering ineligible people. 

Voting experts have said there isn't widespread election fraud in the country. But the new Illinois law comes as President Donald Trump has appointed a commission to probe the integrity of the voting system, including practices that ``could lead to improper voter registrations and improper voting.'' Russian meddling in the 2016 campaign and state election systems prompted concerns about U.S. election security. 

Oregon became the first state to automatically register voters with a 2015 law. It led to a surge in new voters last year. Other states including California, Vermont and West Virginia have adopted similar laws, with roughly two dozen other states considering automatic voter registration measures.