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Law puts younger teenagers on voter rolls

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Tuesday, Dec. 31, 2013 2:44 AM
Parker

DENVER – When driver’s license offices open Jan. 2, Colorado 16-year-olds can get something else when they pick up their licenses: a voter registration card.

Teens still will have to be at least 18 before they can vote, but a law that took effect Jan. 1 this year allows 16-year-olds to preregister and be added to the voter rolls as soon as they are 18.

Teens on the Colorado Youth Advisory Council pushed for the bill last spring.

“A surprising number of youths will take advantage of it,” Graham said. “It will get more popular as it gets implemented.”

Although Jan. 2 is the first day 16-year-olds can sign up to vote at the driver’s license office, they have been able to register at the county clerk’s office since Aug. 7, the day other portions of the law took effect.

Conventional wisdom holds that young voters tend to support Democrats, and legislators seem to agree. Every Democrat in the House and Senate voted for the bill, while every Republican voted against it.

House Democrats had tried in 2011 and 2012 to pass the bill, but they failed because they were in the minority until 2013.

Secretary of State Scott Gessler, a Republican, opposed the bill, but now that it passed, his office is focused on implementing it, said his spokesman, Andrew Cole.

“The challenge is to make sure people aren’t confused,” Cole said.

Sixteen-year-olds can register to vote, but they can’t cast a ballot until they turn 18. And they need to be ready to update their registrations if they move away after high school.

“Just because you register when you’re 16, if you do move, you have to update your registration,” Cole said.

Voter registrations are public records, but the new law shields the identity of teenagers who register to vote until they turn 18.

jhanel@cortezjournal.com

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