Alejandra Armstrong – Voting Wars: Rights | Power | Privilege https://votingwars.news21.com/blog/ Voting Wars: Rights | Power | Privilege Mon, 15 Aug 2016 18:45:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7 California undocumented immigrant can’t vote, but serves on city board https://votingwars.news21.com/blog/2016/08/11/california-undocumented-immigrant-cant-vote-but-serves-on-city-board/ Thu, 11 Aug 2016 20:15:08 +0000 https://votingwars.news21.com/blog/?p=724

LOS ANGELES – On June 7, Francisco Medina accompanied three friends to the polls to cast ballots in California’s presidential primary election.

He started the day at 7 a.m. with a friend in his home city of Huntington Park. Then, he went to Santa Monica. He finished in Bell Gardens.

Medina’s friends asked him for information on the candidates, from assembly members to the presidential candidates.

Medina can’t vote because he’s an undocumented resident, but the day made him feel like he had voted, he said.

“I may not be voting, but I can still influence people,” he said.

Officials in September appointed Medina, 30, to Huntington Park’s Neighborhood Council as the health and education commissioner. According to a city ordinance, two nonresidents are allowed to serve on the city commissions. Commissioners usually receive a monthly stipend, but because of Medina’s legal status, he doesn’t get paid “one penny,” he said.

Huntington Park is a working class community of nearly 60,000 residents near Los Angeles. About 98 percent of Huntington Park’s residents are Latino, and 50 percent of them are undocumented, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

“Politics, for me, is a way to actually make a difference,” he said. “Politics is a way to influence people and to actually improve the quality of people’s lives.”

Medina was born and raised in Mexico City. He came to the U.S. when he was 16 years old with the goal of finishing high school and finding a job. A counselor at his high school encouraged him to apply to college because he was a good student who had potential, Medina said.

He was accepted into college, but he didn’t qualify for financial aid. He worked at a car wash and made less than minimum wage at the time.

Eventually, Medina earned a full-ride scholarship to California State University, Dominguez Hills, where he graduated with degrees in sociology and Chicana/Chicano studies, he said.

“When I became a full-time student, people started telling me I had time to focus on my goals, but it was never about me it was always about the community,” Medina said.

Once in college, Medina organized and advocated for undocumented students. He volunteered with political campaigns and earned a trip to the state Capitol in Sacramento.

There, his life changed.

He met then-Sen. Gil Cedillo. Medina calls him a champion for undocumented immigrants. Cedillo authored the California DREAM Act, which allows undocumented students to receive financial aid for universities, and he worked relentlessly to pass a bill that allows undocumented migrants to obtain driver’s licenses.

The two exchanged numbers, which lead to a call from Cedillo on Christmas Day offering Medina a spot on his team.

Medina served as an unpaid internship for two years with Cedillo’s office.

“It was a beautiful experience,” Medina said. “I was dressing formally, going to events and sometimes, they let me speak on behalf of Senator Gil Cedillo. I started thinking and acting like a politician, but I don’t see myself as a politician. I’m a public servant.”

When Medina was appointed to Huntington Park’s advisory commission, he said some people were angry.

Residents of Huntington Park and neighboring cities said he shouldn’t represent the city if he is undocumented, Medina said.

But to Medina, a person’s legal status doesn’t determine their involvement with the community.

“I always tell people regardless of who you are or where you are coming from, this is your community. This is where you live. You pay taxes. You have your kids who go to school here,” he said. “You have the right to know and ask questions to your city council member.”

Medina said he’d like to see more undocumented residents in local government: “I don’t want to be the first one and I don’t want to be the last one.”

Come back Aug. 20 to see the full News21 report on “Voting Wars.”

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Judge may decide ‘ballot harvesting’ law, provisional ballot issues in Arizona https://votingwars.news21.com/blog/2016/06/16/judge-may-decide-ballot-harvesting-law-provisional-ballot-issues-in-arizona/ Thu, 16 Jun 2016 21:40:45 +0000 https://votingwars.news21.com/blog/?p=306 PHOENIX – A U.S. district court judge may decide two critical issues in Arizona before the November presidential election: whether to stop the state’s new so-called “ballot harvesting” law from taking effect and whether to force elections officials to count out-of-precinct provisional ballots.

The Democratic National Committee and a group of voters have filed a lawsuit accusing officials of voter suppression after people in Maricopa County – the state’s largest county – waited for hours to cast their ballots in the March 22 presidential preference election. They also claim that making ballot harvesting a felony could disenfranchise thousands of minority voters.

The case, Feldman v. Arizona Secretary of State, addresses several other issues. But the plaintiffs filed two motions on June 10 asking the court to grant preliminary injunctions against the state.

Here’s what you need to know about House Bill 2023, which will prevent people from collecting early ballots from others and turning them in to elections officials.

HB 2023Infographic

The motions claim the law will “burden and in some cases deny the fundamental right to vote of thousands of citizens” and that “it was enacted with the intent of suppressing the vote in violation of the First Amendment.”

The plaintiffs also want Maricopa County to come up with a polling place allocation plan that does not repeat the mistakes of the March election, and they want elections officials to count out-of-precinct ballots. The motions argue that not counting those ballots impacts thousands of voters each election, and the practice especially affects voters in large urban communities, like Maricopa County.

Here’s what you need to know about Maricopa County’s precinct-based elections and provisional ballot rejections.

Polling places/provisionalsInfographic

The plaintiffs point out the state’s history of racial discrimination against Hispanics, Native Americans and African Americans and that Arizona used to be a covered jurisdiction under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act.

Court documents highlighted the heated arguments about the ballot harvesting issue as the bill moved through the state Legislature.

During one hearing, when Rep. Charlene Fernandez, D-Yuma, asked members to consider voters living in rural areas miles away from the nearest post office box who could be disenfranchised, “many legislators laughed,” according to court documents.

The documents also state that Rep. Michelle Ugenti-Rita, R-Scottsdale, said, “If you can’t get it done (i.e., the ballot returned in the mail on time), that is not my problem.”

Oral arguments are scheduled for Aug. 3 and 12.

Alejandra Armstrong is an Ethics and Excellence Fellow. Follow her on Twitter .

 

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