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More Young Texans Are Registering to Vote. Will They Actually Turn Out?

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This article in The Texas Tribune.

Less than six weeks out from primary day in Texas, Amanda Edwards, among the , made a campaign stop in the Rio Grande Valley, where she stressed at a small forum the importance of elevating new voices.

鈥淲e have to bring people to the table so that they鈥檙e not on the menu,鈥 the former Houston City Council member said at the January event. 鈥淎nd one of the things that鈥檚 critically important is when we bring them to the table, then we have to deliver.鈥

It was a fitting message, given that the forum was organized not by a seasoned political organization but by a group of local high school students.

, when voters under 30 nearly doubled their vote share compared with the 2014 midterms and came close to matching participation levels from the 2016 presidential election. Among that age group, Hispanic voters made up 30% of the vote share in 2018鈥攁 10% increase from 2014, according to .

Now, in a year when candidates and campaigns are recalibrating and reprioritizing which Texans to reach out to because of that enthusiasm, the big question is: Will more voter registrations translate into an even higher turnout by first-time voters in 2020?

Flashes of electoral enthusiasm are cropping up across the state鈥攁t student-led civic events like the McAllen Senate forum, in growing efforts to register eligible high school students after a law aimed at boosting their participation had been largely ignored, and in the sense of urgency some students say they feel as they prepare to vote this year, many of them for the first time.

Students in McAllen, a border city whose population is 85% Hispanic, said candidates have historically overlooked the Valley鈥檚 youth. They say they want a seat at Edwards鈥 metaphorical table鈥攁nd elected officials who will listen to them.

鈥淵outh down here, we鈥檙e not asking for a lot,鈥 said Jonah Riojas, the 17-year-old student who organized the McAllen forum. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not asking for the impossible. We鈥檙e just asking that our voices are heard and that there鈥檚 some sort of effort or fight to make a difference.鈥

Hispanic youth vote grows

Voting rights groups are hoping to capitalize on the momentum of the 2018 midterm elections, when increased participation among young and Hispanic voters helped of unseating Republican U.S. Sen. .

Given the state鈥檚 demographics鈥斺攈igh school outreach in Texas often overlaps with Latino-targeted outreach, said Victoria DeFrancesco Soto, a lecturer at the University of Texas at Austin鈥檚 LBJ School of Public Affairs.

鈥淲hen we say 鈥榶outh vote,鈥 the overwhelming majority of the youth in Texas are Latino,鈥 DeFrancesco Soto said, adding that she thinks youth turnout will increase again in this year鈥檚 elections. As more campaigns try to court Latino voters, 鈥渢here seems to be an added urgency in terms of the racial, ethnic and migrant-based rhetoric,鈥 she said.

But on the whole, youth organizing groups say campaigns still have a lot of work to do in Texas, especially among Latinos.

鈥淭here鈥檚 this stigma that because we are in the Valley, we are stuck in these subservient statuses, or once you鈥檙e in the Valley, you鈥檙e stuck in the Valley,鈥 Riojas said. 鈥淔or youth in the Valley specifically, we鈥檝e been kind of degraded and overlooked.鈥

A poll released Feb. 18 by the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement at Tufts University found that 鈥攁nd 75% of Latinos in that age group鈥攈ave not heard from a campaign or political party.

At the same time, young people in Texas are tuning in politically now more than ever, said Stephanie G贸mez, high school voter campaign coordinator at the Texas Civil Rights Project. Students who will be first-time voters this year say they have been following climate change activism on social media and hosting debate watch parties with friends.

鈥淭exas youth are not apathetic,鈥 G贸mez said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 that there are a lot of barriers in front of them to get them to vote, and that shouldn鈥檛 be the case, but it is, unfortunately, the case in Texas.鈥

Complying with the law

In an effort to boost Texas鈥 chronically low turnout among young voters, state lawmakers passed a bill in 1983 requiring principals or other designated registrars to circulate voter registration forms to eligible students鈥攖hose age 17 years and 10 months鈥攁t least twice a year.

But the law didn鈥檛 include penalties for noncompliance, and : Just 14% of Texas public high schools with at least 20 seniors requested voter registration applications from the secretary of state ahead of the 2016 general elections, and no private school requested the applications, according to the Texas Civil Rights Project, which .

High schools can register students using forms they get elsewhere, which the Civil Rights Project can鈥檛 track, but when the group has surveyed principals, it still found high levels of noncompliance.

The group鈥檚 latest data shows compliance has dramatically increased across the state since 2016, notably in urban areas, thanks in part to ramped-up efforts by grassroots groups that go into classrooms and register students themselves, G贸mez said.

Ahead of the 2018 general elections, the Texas Civil Rights Project found that some form of voter registration activity occurred at 38% of Texas public high schools: 22% requested forms, 11% utilized an outside group鈥檚 registration drive and 5% did both, according to the group, which also found that 27 private schools requested voter registration forms.

Some of the state鈥檚 largest counties have led the increase: Between the 2016 and 2018 elections, compliance in Travis, Bexar and Harris counties jumped from 12% or less to 68%, 59% and 57%, respectively.

鈥淭he Office of the Texas Secretary of State is committed to ensuring that high school students who are eligible or will soon be eligible to vote are informed about how to register so they can play an active role in our democratic process,鈥 Communications Director Stephen Chang said in a written statement, adding that the office provides voter registration forms to all high school principals upon request 鈥渁nd will continue to work with schools and organizations to make readily available the resources that they need to register students.鈥

But in Texas, which has some of the strictest voting laws in the country, the Texas Civil Rights Project wants the secretary of state to do more, including automatically sending registration forms to all high schools each year.

鈥淎 38% compliance rate 鈥 is not enough,鈥 G贸mez said. 鈥淥ur youth need to be registered. They need to be civically engaged. If you talk to anyone, they鈥檙e not going to look at you and be like, 鈥楴o, I don't think youth should be voting,鈥 so if that鈥檚 really, as a state, what we believe, why are we not taking the steps to make sure that is happening?鈥

Filling the gaps

In Harris County, local volunteers with the League of Women Voters have been registering eligible students at each of the high schools in Cypress-Fairbanks ISD.

At many high schools that comply with the registration law, a designated teacher takes time out of class to register eligible students, who are usually seniors. But the process, which includes requesting the forms from the secretary of state and delivering the completed forms to the local county clerk鈥檚 office, can be difficult for teachers and schools to keep up with, said Marlene Lobberecht, president of the League of Women Voters鈥 Cy-Fair chapter.

鈥淭eachers appreciate the great relationship that CFISD has with the League of Women Voters and the assistance with voter registration,鈥 Leslie Francis, the district鈥檚 assistant superintendent for communication and community relations, said in a statement. 鈥淭he LWV does an excellent job of presenting voter registration information to our students.鈥

Now the volunteers have their routine down to a science鈥攁 team of five or six can register between 100 and 180 students in a single day, Lobberecht said. So far this year, she said, her chapter has registered 1,474 seniors.

鈥淲e can do a voter registration drive within 10 to 12 minutes,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hen we go to the next class and do it again.鈥

In some high schools, staff members are taking their own initiative. This year, Jain Thompson, a librarian at McCallum High School in Austin, started offering additional registration opportunities in the library.

Thompson said she registered 104 students in time to vote in Texas鈥 March 3 primary. On a recent Friday, she went to class in a final push to register seniors before the deadline.

In one classroom she visited, everyone who was eligible to vote was already registered. (鈥淵es, ma鈥檃m,鈥 they said in unison when Thompson asked.) In another, several students wanted to register but were disappointed to learn they fell just shy of Texas鈥 minimum age requirement. Thompson returned to the library with four eligible seniors in tow.

Senior Ruby Del Valle said she and all her friends will definitely vote, even if it means missing part of the school day.

鈥淢aybe some people will just skip the whole day,鈥 Del Valle said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not really a skipper, and I have a basketball game that day, so I don鈥檛 know if I鈥檒l be able to. But hopefully.鈥

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Sami Sparber
More Young Texans Are Registering to Vote. Will They Actually Turn Out?