Home ACLU encourages legislators to support no-excuse absentee voting
News

ACLU encourages legislators to support no-excuse absentee voting

constitutionThe ACLU of Virginia yesterday urged legislators to support measures that expand voting rights by providing for no-excuse absentee voting for all voters.

“Generally, any voter should be allowed to vote absentee for any reason, and regardless of reason that voter should be able to cast that ballot either in-person or by mail,” said ACLU of Virginia Executive Director Claire G. Gastañaga. “Our current excuse-based system unnecessarily infringes on voters’ privacy by requiring those seeking an absentee ballot to provide to the government personal information – such as the details of a medical condition or religious practices – without providing any safeguards to protect the confidentiality of that information.”

Under current law, voters seeking to vote absentee are required to give general registrars very personal and private information about their medical conditions, illnesses, pregnancies or disabilities that may or may not be visible or public, and personal or business plans. With such private information in the hands of registrars, the ACLU recommends that legislators dictate adequate privacy protections and policies for the secure handling of voters’ confidential information.

In addition to privacy concerns, the letter sent to legislators by ACLU of Virginia Legislative Counsel Hope Amezquita outlined issues related to the adverse impact of limiting no-excuse absentee voting to voters casting ballots in-person.

“The ACLU of Virginia is grateful for your leadership and efforts to expand voting rights for citizens of the Commonwealth and encouragement of active participation in the electoral process,” wrote Amezquita. “…[T]he ACLU, [however,] is concerned that limiting no-excuse absentee voting to in-person voters will have an adverse affect on certain classes of voters…If Virginia limits no-excuse absentee voting to in-person only, qualified voters may be excluded from participating based upon a lack of readily accessible transportation, geography, income status, and may disproportionately impact minority communities.”

“The ideal solution is for Virginia to allow for no-excuse absentee voting in-person and by mail-in ballot,” said Gastañaga. “It eliminates any potential disparate impact and assures voters’ privacy rights.”

The ACLU of Virginia’s letter was sent to Senators Ebbin, Howell, J.C. Miller, Herring, and McWaters and Delegates Morrissey, Scott, Villanueva, Herring, Lopez, D. Marshall, Torian, Surovell, Watts, Ware, Plum.

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

FIFA world cup 2026 soccer
Etc.

Two former UVA Soccer stars competing in the 2026 World Cup

drought update
Virginia

Yes, Virginia, we’re still in a drought: 7.5 inches of rain behind, with summer heat upon us

No surprise here, that the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality is telling us today that it is continuing the existing drought advisory statuses for pretty much the entire state.

data center technology networking
Politics, Virginia

We don’t like data center tax breaks: But there’s more to it than that

The state budget is still being held up, almost entirely because Gov. Abigail Spanberger and House of Delegates Speaker Don Scott want to preserve tax breaks for developers of hyperscale data centers.

measles illustration
Virginia

VDH: Beware Amish auction in Buckingham County amid measles outbreak

Brittany Paige Sheffer Churchville stabbing incident
Local

Male stabbing victim had significant blood loss in fight ‘fueled by alcohol’

washington nationals
Baseball

NoVa native walks off Nats with grand slam to complete stunning SF comeback

staunton
Local

Staunton: New online permitting portal streamlines process for residents, developers