Republicans in Alabama are pushing forward with their culture war initiatives.
On Tuesday, state lawmakers approved a bill prohibiting paid assistance with absentee ballot applications and another restricting diversity, equity and inclusion programs at state agencies and universities.
The two bills will now go to Gov. Kay Ivey for her signature.
According to AP, the absentee voting bill would make it a misdemeanor to give voters pre-filled absentee ballot applications or to turn in another voter’s completed application. The bill also makes it a felony to receive a payment or gift “for distributing, ordering, requesting, collecting, completing, prefilling, obtaining, or delivering a voter’s absentee ballot application.”
Republicans claim the bill is aimed at controlling “Ballot harvesting.”
“Our elections are the foundation of our constitutional republic, and nobody should be paid for their absentee application or their ballot, Secretary of State Wes Allen wrote in a press release. “Ballot harvesting should not be a job description.”
But state Democrats and advocates pushed back, calling the bill more a desperate attempt to make it harder for people to vote.
“It’s just another voter suppression,” Senate Minority Leader Bobby Singleton told AP. “ It’s just a means of suppressing certain people from having the ability and right to access to the free-flowing of the vote.”
Jerome Dees, Alabama policy director for the Southern Poverty Law Center Action Fund, also spoke to AP about the bill, calling it “cruel legislation aims to criminalize the charitable acts of good Samaritans across the state, whether from neighbors, church members, nursing home staffers, or prison chaplains.”
Republicans didn’t stop at restricting vote rights, they also set their sights on demolishing DEI efforts, which conservatives all over the country have made a priority.
According to AP, the Alabama bill would prohibit…
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