116 3rd St SE
Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401
Home / Opinion / Guest Columnists
Voter suppression bill robs Iowans of the right to correct their government
James Larew
Feb. 24, 2021 6:00 am
We live in troubling times. The good news is that a democracy, such as Iowa's, is inherently self-correcting.
Inept politicians can be replaced. Foolish policies can be changed. Disastrous mistakes can be reversed. The greater the voter participation, the more likely, the more speedily, self-corrections will be made.
The voter suppression bills in the Iowa Legislature strike at the heart of Iowans' ability to replace inept politicians, to correct foolish policies and to reverse disastrous mistakes. The proposed legislation will injure this self-correcting process, if passed, by making it more difficult for Iowans to vote.
' Citing falsehoods, Iowa GOP lawmaker backs voting limits
What possible questions do these bills answer?
Iowa's history is an arc, imperfectly designed by people of all political persuasions, covering a period of more than one and a half centuries, under which citizens have gained increased opportunities to vote and to participate in civic life.
These bills fracture that arc and unsettle that history. Under the proposals, citizens who, by their votes, would be in a position to minister to the self-corrections of law and policy that Iowa needs, will be reduced by:
' Sharply limiting the early voting period
' Stripping away much of the local control of elections
' Making it easier to remove people from voting rolls
' Punishing local election officials who are accused of minor infractions - including those whose only errors have been made in an effort to increase voter participation
' Making it harder for candidates to qualify to be on statewide and federal ballots
It is bitterly ironic, but not by coincidence, that this voter suppression attack has been made following recent elections in which Iowa has emerged as a voter-turnout leader in the nation.
The bills are offered by a party that, once in control, is determined to maintain that position by reducing the numbers of people who might register their support for policy self-corrections that are so clearly needed in public policy domains such as:
' Public health: At one time, Iowa presented models to the nation for effective public health practices. But not any longer. Foolish policies - or no policies at all - in this past year have produced highly visible, humiliating results: some of the highest COVID-19 infection rates the nation have been hosted in Iowa communities, urban and rural alike.
Our state's COVID-19 mortality rate (170 deaths per 100,000 residents), perhaps the most objective measure of public health policy efficacy nearly one year after the COVID-19 infections were first discovered in Iowa, is among the highest rate in the upper Midwest. Concerned Iowans, determined to reverse Iowa's public health policy race-to-the-bottom, can change that trajectory in local and state elections by voting for new political leadership. Voter suppression supporters perceive that threat.
' Household income: Iowa, with built-in advantages of arterial railroad and national highways crisscrossing its land, of world-class soils and of a dispersed, highly-educated work force, should be leading the upper Midwest in basic economic opportunities. But, we suffer by comparison to our neighbors. For example, Iowa's average household income ($78,411) lags these states: Wisconsin ($80,674), Illinois ($92,395), Nebraska ($80,208), Minnesota ($93,925) and Michigan ($78,600).
Governmental policies, not natural resources or human capital, have driven these results. Iowans, armed with ballots, are in a position to force the changes that are needed. Fewer voters at the polls will reduce the likelihood of effective challenges to those policies or the elected officials who promoted them. Voter suppression advocates understand this.
' Air and water quality: According to U.S. News and World Report, Iowa has one of the worst rankings for air and water quality in the U.S. (41st). Iowans who have lived here for any length of time have witnessed this deterioration in their every-ay lives. We are surrounded by states whose environmental quality very substantially surpasses our own. Here are the rankings of our closest neighbors in that same report: Minnesota (#6), Wisconsin (#7), Missouri (#8), South Dakota (#11) and Michigan (#14).
How long will Iowans put up with such environmental disparities, when compared to those states that are so close by? Fewer voters participating in elections means the likelihood of needed change is reduced - and voter suppression advocates know this.
' Roads and bridges At one time, Iowa's road system was the envy of the nation. But, not any longer. When traveling in Iowa, one doesn't need a map or a sign to know when one's vehicle has crossed a state line. One need only pay attention to the vibration of one's vehicle, or the quality of a rest stop. We are disgraced by the fact that Iowa leads the nation with the largest number structurally deficient bridges of any state in the union. Only voters, registering their voices for changes in our transportation policies, can make that change happen. Those voices will be the victims of the voter suppression legislation now-proposed - and, the proponents of this legislation know this.
Voter suppression, the clear purpose of these bills, is but a desperate attempt to delay the inevitable exercise of power by a sovereign people.
If passed, the laws will slow, but never extinguish, Iowans' ability to replace inept office holders, to change foolish policies and to correct disastrous mistakes.
I would urge legislators to get on the right side of history and to vote against these bills.
James Larew is an attorney in Iowa City.
A polling place at the Kirkwood Community College Recreation Center in the 2020 election in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette)
Opinion content represents the viewpoint of the author or The Gazette editorial board. You can join the conversation by submitting a letter to the editor or guest column or by suggesting a topic for an editorial to editorial@thegazette.com

Daily Newsletters