It has been a very
interesting week listening to talk radio. The Supreme Court will not hear
the 7 cases about same sex marriage, which I will definitely not try to touch,
and there is a lot of talk about voting rights. I was listening to
Hannity on 890 am on my way to lunch. There was talk about not allowing
states to change their voting requirements this close to election. I
decided to pull up some additional information and by chance picked on The
Christian Science Monitor link on our class home page. An
interesting topic stared me in the face, "College students: New Hampshire
is trying to stop us from voting." I thought to my self, this sounds
interesting, this really sounds like a political argument he said she said
debate of sorts. Reading through the article New Hampshire is trying to
change voter registration. The article states that college students who
are not from New Hampshire to prove residency will either have to get a New
Hampshire driver's license or register their car.
I find the title to this
article interesting and fallacious. New Hampshire is not trying to
prevent college students from voting. New Hampshire is requiring you to
be registered to vote. You can either vote where you are going to college
or you can vote in your hometown. You do however need to make wherever
you are voting your legal domicile. I found a few items that were helpful
for me in trying to look at this article from many different angles. USA.gov states, "To be eligible to
vote, you must be a U.S. citizen. In most states, you must be 18 years old to
vote, but some states do allow 17 years old to vote. States also have their own
residency requirements to vote. For additional information about state-specific
requirements and voter eligibility, contact your state election office." In here
it tells me States have their own residency requirements to vote. I
pulled up New Hampshire’s voting registrations requirements at sos.nh.gov.
These voter registration questions and answers tells us who can register
to vote in New Hampshire along with their definition of domiciled.
New Hampshire’s government website tells us that, "you can only register in
the town or ward in which you are domiciled. Your domicile is that place,
more than any other, where you sleep most nights of the year, or to which you
intend to return after a temporary absence." They also give examples
of temporary absence specific to this article as, "teachers and
students." Meaning that if you are a student in New Hampshire with
no intention of staying in New Hampshire and you have not legally changed
your domicile, then you should not be voting in New Hampshire. To me
this makes cogent sense, you want to vote in a place where you will be living.
I am not living in New York why should I vote in the state of New York etc.
You vote in your domicile because you want a say over what goes on in your
neighborhood/ state. I find it ridiculous that students who
have no intention of living in a state are going to schools in that state just
to vote, but then will not be there to live by the laws of the people who are
elected. With the majority of the states allowing absentee voting they
will still have an opportunity to vote in a place they are domiciled.
New Hampshire is
not trying to prevent students from voting. New Hampshire is asking
those who will be domiciling in that state to register to vote, like USA.gov
says by the rules of the state. New Hampshire does not want people to vote
in New Hampshire if they are only temporarily residing in New Hampshire.