On October 11, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a voter pre-registration measure spearheaded this year by the New America Foundation and backed by FairVote, Common Cause, Californians for Electoral Reform and many others. It establishes that all Californians turning 17 can register to vote. Voter pre-registration measures allowing 16-year-olds to pre-register have also become law in recent years in North Carolina and Florida. A member of the Massachusetts statehouse leadership announced last week that a similar measure is her top priority in coming weeks, and the Washington, D.C. City Council last week unanimously backed pre-registration legislation.FairVote's work pushing pre-registration since 2005 is also making a big difference in Rhode Island, where a major canvassing effort (the “Make it Happen” campaign) is underway in support of pre-registration. A Pew Charitable Trusts research team currently is examining the impact of pre-registration on FairVote's goal of universal registration of all soon-to-be-eligible voters, ideally twinned with civic programs explaining voting mechanics and the history of suffrage.
- Massachusetts news story detailing Rep. Ellen Story's support for pre-registration
- Rhode Island video by young activists backing pre-registraiton
- New America Foundation factsheet on preregistration in California and news story
- FairVote resources on pre-registration
- The bad news--see what good election and transparency bills the governor vetoed here






The Washington D.C. City Council unanimously approved the Omnibus Election Reform Act of 2009 on October 6. If given final approval at the council’s next meeting, this landmark piece of legislation will usher in a wave of significant improvements to the District’s voting and registration rules to bring more residents into the political process, and will commission a study of automatic voter registration for all eligible voters.
North Carolina governor Bev Perdue signed H.B. 908, an election reform bill that includes the FairVote-endorsed policy of youth preregistration and improved opportunities for voter registration in high schools. Following Hawaii and Florida, North Carolina becomes the third state to set a uniform voter registration age of 16-years-old. The bill passed the House and the Senate by votes of 107-6 and 32-3, respectively.