And not just the U.S. government, but most of the 50 state governments have chosen this priority.
Don’t take it from me, look at the numbers. If you’re male and you get a driver’s license in any of these places, you’re signed up automatically with, or you’re given the option to sign up automatically with, or—in most cases—you’re required to sign up with the Selective Service System: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Sout h Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and the District of Columbia.
Also Maryland enacted driver’s license legislation in 2002, but has not yet implemented it.
This is a work in progress. Some states have yet to climb on board. It’s a bit of extra work for state and federal governments, but the technology is pretty simple, and they clearly consider it worth the effort to spread awareness that all men might have to kill on behalf of some war crazed president or Congress, and that—as the SSS website says—”It’s What a Man’s Got to Do. It’s quick, it’s easy, it’s the Law”.
Actually it’s against any number of laws, including protections of conscientious objectors (you’re not offered any choice of that when the process is automated), and including obviously the laws against war—the Kellogg-Briand Pact and the U.N. Charter.
But what does this have to do with voting? Ruining Iraq or Libya or Afghanistan or Yemen in the name of “democracy” isn’t exactly about voting in the United States, is it?
Well here’s the deal. Two states—two (2), count ‘em, TWO—have just made voter registration as easy as 39 states make draft registration. Those two states make it optional. If you don’t want to register to vote when you get a driver’s license, you can opt out. So, that’s different. And it works for women as well as men. So, that’s different, and simpler. And there’s no need to interact with the federal government, so that, too, is different and easier. But otherwise it’s the same deal. The state division of motor vehicles is identifying you for a driver’s license or ID through a more rigorous process than is usually used to register voters. After doing that, it’s hardly any extra work to simply consider you registered to vote as well.
Only two states have done this. If you’d like to see which two they are, or if you’d like to click a button to email your state legislators and governor about doing the same, click here.
Now, the federal government doesn’t do driver’s licenses, but it does do Social Security numbers, and it and many other institutions rely on Social Security numbers as a reliable means of identification. There is no reason that a person possessing a Social Security number cannot be considered eligible to vote. (Making sure that the 8 people who try to drive around voting in more than one state get caught would be identical to how that’s done now.) The federal government chooses not to do this. Forty-eight state governments plus various occupied territories choose not to do this, even though it would be far easier than draft registration and even though its connection to actual democracy is much more straightforward.
At least half the country is pretty well disgusted with both of the two big political parties and all of their elected members. And most members of the U.S. House of Representatives are gerrymandered and sponsored into their seats more or less for life or until promotion to the lobbying league. But the general theory holds, nonetheless, that higher voter turnout is better for Democrats than Republicans. The two states that have acted so far have done so with Democratic legislatures and governors. But many Democratic states have not acted yet, and the benefits of acting would be very much to small-d democracy.
With more voters, candidates would have to appeal to more people, including more poor people. More candidates might gain traction. The range of debate would be widened. It would also become easier to place public initiatives on the ballot through the process of gathering the signatures of registered voters. Political polling would more accurately reflect public sentiments, because pollsters would have more registered voters to poll.
In addition, each state government would save the expense of the existing ridiculous system of “registering” people it already knows and has identified. This would free up time and energy and money for other things. “Let’s get on the rolls automatically and put all the resources and energy we’ve put into voter registration into voter education,” says California Secretary of State Alex Padilla.
It wouldn’t be just state governments doing that. Every election season, thousands of volunteers for political parties and candidates across the country spend endless hours registering people to vote. They think of this as useful work. Many even think of it as “activism”. Let’s imagine that work were eliminated. What could those thousands of volunteers do instead? They could educate and organize around the issues and policies they care about. What a gift to democracy that would be! Better than any bloody foreign quagmire I can imagine!