[NYTIMES]

August 9, 2004
Immigrants Raise Call for Right to Be Voters
By RACHEL L. SWARNS

WASHINGTON, Aug. 8 - For months, the would-be revolutionaries plotted
strategy and lobbied local politicians here with the age-old plea, "No
taxation without representation!" Last month, some of the unlikely
insurgents - Ethiopian-born restaurateurs, travel agents and real estate
developers in sober business suits - declared that victory finally
seemed within reach.

Five City Council members announced their support for a bill that would
allow thousands of immigrants to vote in local elections here, placing
the nation's capital among a handful of cities across the country in the
forefront of efforts to offer voting rights to noncitizens.

"It will happen,'' said Tamrat Medhin, a civic activist from Ethiopia
who lives here. "Don't you believe that if people are working in the
community and paying taxes, don't you agree that they deserve the
opportunity to vote?''

Calling for "democracy for all," immigrants are increasingly pressing
for the right to vote in municipal elections. In Washington, the
proposed bill, introduced in July, would allow permanent residents to
vote for the mayor and members of the school board and City Council.

In San Francisco, voters will decide in November whether to allow
noncitizens - including illegal immigrants - to vote in school board
elections. Efforts to expand the franchise to noncitizens are also
bubbling up in New York, Connecticut and elsewhere. Several cities,
including Chicago, and towns like Takoma Park, Md., already allow
noncitizens to vote in municipal or school elections.

But in most cities, voting remains a right reserved for citizens, and
the prospects for the initiatives in Washington and San Francisco remain
uncertain. The proposals have inspired fierce opposition from critics
who say the laws would undermine the value of American citizenship and
raise security concerns in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks. Washington's mayor, Anthony Williams, has expressed his support
for extending voting rights to permanent residents, but has yet to
garner a majority of supporters on the 13-member City Council. In San
Francisco, critics have questioned whether the law would violate the
state's Constitution.

In this city, where Ethiopian restaurants and El Salvadoran travel
agents dot many urban streets, advocates argue that permanent residents
are paying taxes and fighting and dying for the United States as
soldiers in Iraq while lacking a voice in local government. They
describe the ban on immigrant voting as akin to the kind of taxation
without representation that was a major cause of the American Revolution.

They also note that the United States has a long history of allowing
noncitizens to vote. Twenty-two states and federal territories at
various times allowed noncitizens to vote - even as blacks and women
were barred from the ballot box - in the 1800's and 1900's.

Concerns about the radicalism of immigrants arriving from southern and
Eastern Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries led states to
restrict such voting rights. By 1928, voting at every level had been
restricted to United States citizens. Today, some argue, those rights
should be restored to noncitizens.

"They're paying taxes, they're working, they're contributing to our
prosperity,'' said Jim Graham, the councilman who introduced the bill
here. "And yet they're not able to exercise the franchise.

"This is part of our history. A lot of people don't know what the
history of this nation is in terms of immigrant voting; they don't
understand even that localities can determine this issue. It's a very
healthy discussion.''

Critics counter that the proposed laws would make citizenship irrelevant
and pledges of allegiance to the United States meaningless. It is a
touchy political issue, particularly in an election year when many
politicians across party lines are lobbying for support from Hispanic
voters, and many politicians have tried to sidestep it altogether.

Democrats have most often sponsored the initiatives, but some also
oppose them. In Washington, where Congress has the right to override
city laws, some Republicans said they would try to overturn the
immigrant voting bill if it passed.

"Is it really too much to ask that American citizenship be a
prerequisite for voting in American elections?'' Representative Tom
Tancredo, Republican of Colorado, asked in a letter to members of
Congress last month.

"One of the things that differentiates American citizenship from simple
residency is the right to vote,'' said Mr. Tancredo, who rallied
opposition to the bill. "The passage of this measure would not only blur
that distinction, it would erase it - allowing as many as 40,000 aliens
in the District of Columbia to vote.''

In San Francisco, some critics have also argued that the proposals raise
security concerns. Louise Renne, a former city attorney in San Francisco
and a longtime critic of the concept, recently raised the question of
whether terrorists would soon be allowed access to the polls. "If
noncitizens can vote,'' she asked reporters, "can Osama bin Laden vote
in a school election?"

Advocates for noncitizen voting rights dismiss concerns about threats to
national security, noting that several countries, including Belgium and
Ireland, allow noncitizens to vote in local elections. New Zealand
allows permanent residents to vote in local and national elections.

They argue that immigrants will still aspire to citizenship because it
is the only way they can vote in federal elections. And having the right
to vote, they argue, will help noncitizens feel more politically engaged
and committed to this country.

"A lot of communities are not represented by representatives who reflect
the diversity in their communities and are responsive to their needs,''
said Ron Hayduk, a professor of political science at the Borough of
Manhattan Community College and an advocate for immigrant voting rights.
"It raises basic fundamental questions about democracy.''

In Washington, Connie Mann, a 44-year-old permanent resident from
Namibia, is already dreaming of voting for the mayor. Sergio Luna of
Guatemala, a community outreach specialist for the city, hopes to
improve this city's struggling schools, where his son is a student. "If
we have the opportunity to vote for the school board, the Council and
the mayor, we'll be making some changes,'' he said.

Mr. Graham, who was applauded by his Ethiopian supporters last week for
introducing the voting legislation here, says he believes the bill will
become law, even if it not this year. He says he needs the support of
only two more members of the Council and is working to woo them, even if
that means reintroducing the legislation next year. Lobbying Congress,
he said, would be the next step. "This is not a 50-yard dash issue,'' he
said. "This is an issue you just have to keep working on.''

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