Is the Obama administration caving to Republicans by paring back efforts to help people register to vote when they sign up for Obamacare starting next week?
Existing law requires that when people sign up for public assistance, they be given the chance to register to vote. But after the GOP kicked up a fuss about the idea that Obamacare might be used to add new voters to the rolls, the administration may now do so little to help people register that it could end up violating the law.
Making registration—not just voting—more difficult has emerged in recent years as a key piece of the GOP’s effort to erect barriers to the ballot box. In Florida, North Carolina, and other states, Republicans have sought to make registration harder. And in April, Rep. Charles Boustany, a Louisiana Republican, wrote to the Department of Health and Human Services raising concerns about a draft version of the application to sign up for the Obamacare healthcare exchanges, which asked applicants if they’d like to register to vote.
A Health Department official responded to Boustany by noting that the 1993 National Voter Registration Act, known as “Motor Voter,” requires that states offer that chance to anyone signing up for public assistance or at the DMV.
But the devil may be in the details.
The Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services, which is handling the roll-out of the exchanges, told MSNBC that applications to join the exchanges will include the sentence:
If you want to register to vote, you can complete a voter registration form at www.usa.gov.
That address takes applicants to a general government assistance site that includes no information about voting on its homepage, requiring people to use the search tool. Experts in designing such systems say that kind of multi-step approach is an ineffective way of getting large numbers of people to register.
Additional components of the voter-registration assistance appear to have fallen by the wayside. According to the since-withdrawn report, as described Tuesday by Mother Jones, CMS had been mulling training the Obamacare “navigators” who will help people sign up for the exchanges to also help them register to vote. Asked whether that would happen, a CMS spokesperson pledged to respond but did not immediately do so.









