The
NY Post has an interesting
piece today about Ruben Wills, a NY City Councilman who is pushing
legislation in the City Council to require the city Department of Corrections
to “publicize the right of prisoners — awaiting trial or convicted of
misdemeanors — to vote.” This is, at best, a questionable use of limited
government resources. More interestingly, the Councilman is under indictment
for “allegedly swiping government funds from a nonprofit that he once ran”
There
is obvious absurdity and irony in an indicted Councilman pushing legislation to
help imprisoned likely criminals to vote. Certainly, those incarcerated,
non-convicted prisoners should be able to vote if they are otherwise qualified
to vote. We do believe in innocent until proven guilty in the United States.
However, we really have to ask if it is appropriate for an indicted Councilman
to push this legislation, and secondly, if this is really the best use of
taxpayer resources? We know New York City has serious deep-seeded and
systematic problems with its elections so it’s perplexing why a City Council
member would be focusing on superfluous priorities such as pushing voting for
city prisoners.
NYC’s
longstanding election administration problems were uncovered in a recent
investigation and subsequent audit
report from the New York Department of Investigations (DOI). During the
course of its audit, the DOI identified a number of individuals who should have
been removed from the city’s voter rolls, including ineligible felons, but were
not. DOI investigators then appeared at NYC polling places to vote in the name
of the ineligible voters. Undercover agents were cleared by poll workers to
vote for the ineligible voters 97% of the time. DOI investigators were able to
vote for 14 out of the 15 felons they impersonated at the polls. DOI would have
had complete success if it weren’t for one amazing coincidence recounted in the
audit report:
In the one instance where an investigator
failed to vote as a felon listed in the registration book, the investigator was
unable to vote because the poll inspector at the election district 18 table
stated that she was the mother of the felon voter for whom the investigator was
attempting to vote.
The
DOI’s audit report was nothing short of an indictment on New York City’s
electoral system. You think the Councilman whose body is responsible for
oversight of the city’s Board of Elections would be focusing his attention on
holding the BOE accountable for fixing the dozens of problems identified in the
report, including the charges of nepotism, inadequate training, and vulnerabilities
to fraud. Instead, he is pushing for voting rights for prisoners, a position he
may very well find himself if incarcerated for his alleged crime.
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