New York's Move Allowing Non-Citizens to Vote Could Lead Other Cities to Follow

Joe Money

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New York's Move Allowing Non-Citizens to Vote Could Lead Other Cities to Follow

New York City lawmakers approved a historic measure on Thursday to grant hundreds of thousands of non-citizens the right to vote in local elections, setting the stage for a broader battle between supporters who want to expand immigrants’ voting rights and critics who think the move devalues citizenship.

The new measure, which will become law within 30 days if it’s not vetoed or earlier if the mayor signs it before then, is expected to apply to more than 800,000 non-citizens who will soon be able to cast a vote for mayor, public advocate, city council members and other municipal candidates. It covers legal permanent residents who have lived in the city for at least 30 consecutive days and are green card holders or are legally authorized to work in the U.S. They will not be permitted to vote in state and federal elections.

Immigration advocates in New York City and other parts of the country have been rallying behind the effort to give voting rights to non-citizens for years, saying they have long been an integral part of the community both as taxpayers and essential workers who deserve a say in local government.

New York City is set to be the largest U.S. jurisdiction to allow non-citizen residents to vote in local elections regardless of citizenship or immigration status, joining about a dozen smaller cities and towns in the U.S., including several towns in Maryland and Vermont. A handful of other major cities, including Washington D.C. and Portland, Maine, have recently considered similar changes.

New York City Councilman Ydanis Rodriguez, an immigrant from the Dominican Republic who became a U.S. citizen in 2000 and sponsored the bill, hopes the measure will encourage people running for public office to pay more attention to immigrant communities.

“Anyone who would like to be elected for a citywide office will have to spend the same amount of time visiting those communities—not only to celebrate their culture by dancing and eating their food—but discussing their platforms and agendas,” Rodriguez says. “They will have to dedicate the same time in those working-class communities that they dedicate in middle- and upper-class communities.”

Rodriguez and other supporters of the measure are optimistic that New York’s move will encourage other cities to follow.

“When New York City does something, it ripples across the nation,” says Murad Awawdeh, executive director of the New York Immigration Coalition. “We want to make sure that what we’re doing here is really leading the way for others to also think about how they can enfranchise immigrants in their own cities.”

Critics of the measure, including City Council minority leader Joseph Borelli, say it devalues the votes of U.S. citizens. Borelli has questioned whether paying taxes should serve as a reason to be able to vote, noting that even tourists pay hotel occupancy and sales tax. “I’m sure Democrats wouldn’t want to keep the standard for voting tax-paying,” he says. Borelli anticipates that the measure will spark legal challenges.

Although New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio has raised concerns about the possibility of the measure dissuading individuals from pursuing citizenship, he said last month that he would not veto the measure if it passed.

Similar provisions in other parts of the country have also met resistance. In September, the Republican National Committee sued two Vermont towns for allowing non-citizens to vote in local elections, calling it a “radical scheme…to allow foreign citizens to decide American elections.” At least five state legislatures, including Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Florida and North Dakota, have taken steps to preempt any such provisions.

Voting rights in America were not always tied to citizenship. From the founding of the country until 1926, 40 states allowed non-citizens to vote at various times throughout America’s history, some of them not just in local elections but state and federal ones, too.

The question of who can vote has changed over the centuries to include African Americans, women and younger voters, points out Ron Hayduk, a political science professor at San Francisco State University and author of Democracy for All: Restoring Immigrant Voting Rights in the United States. “You can think of democracy as an evolving practice,” he says.

New York City’s vast expansion of residents’ voting rights comes at the tail end of a year marked by a spate of voting restrictions passed by state legislatures across the nation. Hayduk says the city’s move puts the issue of who gets to participate in American democracy on the national agenda in a new and unprecedented way.

“For New York City to do this really draws our attention to these questions: How do we think about democracy? Who’s included? Who’s excluded?” Hayduk says. New York’s decision “really firmly says, ‘Hey, we are an immigrant city, these are real New Yorkers and we want to make immigrant rights real by giving them a real voice.’”

For Eva Santos, a mother of three and a DACA recipient who immigrated from the Dominican Republic, the measure helps her feel recognized as somebody who works in New York City, files taxes, and deserves a say in how the city is run.

“All of my children were born in New York City,” Santos says. “I want to be able to help elect representatives who will make decisions that have my children’s futures, their safety, and their best interest at heart, just like any parent who is a U.S. citizen would.”

 
Come on fam, if the cac hicks mad about non-citizens voting, it's a win for the black community. You are not reading the memo correctly. :hmm:

:lol:

In 2020, Trump outperformed his 2016 numbers with Latinos in Georgia, Florida, Nevada, Colorado, Arizona, Iowa, Ohio and even NY state but the only way to ensure that he doesn't win in 2024 is to amplify the voting power of the demographic that is trending towards him. Makes sense, right? :smh::lol:And yes, I am aware that this for local elections but my point still stands. :lol:

Meanwhile, GOP sees what happened in Georgia and you get this :smh: :lol:


 
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Welll this is what you liberal coons wanted. I saw the video courtesy of The Black Authority where some Dominican was talking about Jim Crow and I’m like this fool knows nothing about the Jim Crow effect. Everything you fought for they’re getting cause they were too bitch made to fight in their own country.

These immigrants are gonna flood you out and replace you dumb coons.

This is what you niggaz get for always wanting to lump everybody in your struggle. Once they get what they want then they’ll turn against you fools,
 
A lot of these people of color niggaz want to believe these immigrants come here to help them fight white supremacy.
When they get called out for their globalist/pro-white mentality, they try to throw out the same, tired insults. These libertines are the problem and need to be cast out. They obsess over the white man and woman to the point self-destruction.
 
Bad idea, these liberal democrats need to get booted out of office.

And to all you brothers here who cosign this need to understand that this greatly favors Latinos, who historically speaking have never sided for American Blacks.

This is not good.
 
Bad idea, these liberal democrats need to get booted out of office.

And to all you brothers here who cosign this need to understand that this greatly favors Latinos, who historically speaking have never sided for American Blacks.

This is not good.

They all ride black Americans coat tail. Latinos and Asians have always leeched the Black American benefits for themselves and act like they did it themselves. That’s why these people of color coons gotta go.

I’ve seen how other non whites will keep blacks out and put their own in. They’re all in on it. They’re, even other niggaz, all in in on this unwritten rule to keep black people from rising to their full potential.
 
They all ride black Americans coat tail. Latinos and Asians have always leeched the Black American benefits for themselves and act like they did it themselves. That’s why these people of color coons gotta go.

I’ve seen how other non whites will keep blacks out and put their own in. They’re all in on it. They’re, even other niggaz, all in in on this unwritten rule to keep black people from rising to their full potential.
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How exactly is this a win for the hold your vote crowd?
It isn’t but this is the outcome of people blindly voting for one party without demanding return for vote. Only one community is told to vote for free without benefits and Biden exposed it permanently with the younger crowd. There are still enough people that understand this which is why I doubt it happens.
 
Nah. Wish I could get behind this - I know hella lot of undocumented folks here in the city. And their voices need to be heard.

Their voices, their opinions. Not their votes...




This is damaging to African Americans.
 
If they want a stake in local politics, and their voices heard...there is a path to citizenship. Couple that with low turn out of eligible voters in local elections, could be a dramatic shift in outcomes.
 
Tf is that?!
A Latino Male Tranny that Megatron paid to fuck in Brasil and posted it like he was some Pimp. Clown ass fraud always ranting about Hispanics but pays to fuck them. It’s ridiculous. Just like he calls others gay but dabbles in tranny sex
 
As much as I like the sound of it, this is a really bad idea.

Immigrants are already involved in local politics. We may not be able to vote, but we still can donate, volunteer and protest. I would argue that New York immigrants like Trevor Noah and John Oliver have done more to sway political opinions with their shows then they ever could with a ballot.

My biggest worry is that this law is going to cause a severe backlash against immigrants. Federal lawmakers are going to react to what New York does by blocking immigration from countries where people don't share their political views.

A better solution is to completely reform our immigration system. A lot of our laws are antiquated and self-defeating. These laws change drastically without real notice or oversight. Case in point, I got my green card because of a law change that my son's mom noticed but my immigration lawyer didn't.

Most of all, we need to take money away from ICE and direct it towards immigration courts and agents. This is the real reason we have so many illegal immigrants in the first place.
 
NYC is sued for Diluting Voting Rights of Black voters

"The Foreign Citizen Voting Bill violates the Fifteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution because it was adopted with an impermissible racial intent, as well as the explicit intent of its sponsors to increase voting strength of racial subgroups while simultaneously decreasing the voting strength of other racial subgroups. The Foreign Citizen Voting Bill was enacted with the impermissible racial purpose of intentionally abridging the voting strength of Black voters and other racial groups in New York City. Any election procedure enacted with any racial intent or purpose is unconstitutional under the Fifteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution."

 
Come on fam, if the cac hicks mad about non-citizens voting, it's a win for the black community. You are not reading the memo correctly. :hmm:


That's assuming they will vote in favor of policies benefiting Black folks.
1/2 of Latinos vote republican.
 
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