Republican-backed bill requires Tennessee polling places to warn voters from voting in ‘wrong’ primary

Staff Photo by Olivia Ross  / Voters are given their ballots at Red Bank Calvary Baptist Church on Nov. 8.
Staff Photo by Olivia Ross / Voters are given their ballots at Red Bank Calvary Baptist Church on Nov. 8.

A GOP-backed bill requiring every Tennessee polling place to display signs saying it is a crime to vote in a primary without being a bona fide party member advanced Tuesday in the legislature.

Senate Bill 0978 sponsor Sen. Mark Pody, R-Lebanon, said the intent of the bill is to "remind people they have to vote in the proper political party that they're in."

But Sen. Jeff Yarbro, D-Nashville, questioned whether such signage could discourage people from voting. Yarbro said the state does not require any formal party registration in order to vote in primaries and such signage could serve to wrongly signal to voters that they had failed to take a necessary step before voting.

"Are we really educating people here in a way that is meaningful, or are we just potentially discouraging them from voting?" Yarbro said. "It inherently makes me nervous when we're posting statements about potential criminal threats in the polling place."

The proposed law requires yellow signs to be prominently displayed at each voting site that warn voters that casting a ballot in a political party's primary without being a member of, or affiliated with, that party is a misdemeanor.

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Tennessee has open primaries. Voters aren't required to register with a political party to vote, leaving it to voters to self-declare their party affiliation and vote in the primary of their choosing.

State law specifies a voter may cast a ballot in a primary if they are a "bona fide member of and affiliated with the political party in whose primary the voter seeks to vote" or "at the time the voter seeks to vote, the voter declares allegiance" to that party.

A violation of the law is a misdemeanor, which comes with a punishment of up to 30 days in jail and/or a fine of up to $50.

"I'm trying to understand ... the extent to which this is a significant issue," Yarbro said. "Have we actually prosecuted people under this? Has it been upheld from a First Amendment standpoint? I'm trying to make sure we've really thought this through."

Pody said as far as he knew, the law has not been prosecuted.

"This is just stating what our actual law is. This is not changing any of the laws," he said.

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Yarbro said the signs could lead to confusion with both Republican and Democratic voters.

"I think there are a lot of people who vote every year in the Republican primaries who don't know whether or not they are a technical bona fide member of a party," Yarbro said. "I think there are a lot of people who vote in Democratic primaries who could see this and not understand whether or not they count as a bona fide member, because it signals there is some sort of registration or action that you will have taken to join the party, which is not the case in Tennessee."

The bill was approved 7-2 along party lines in the Senate State and Local Government Committee on Tuesday, with only Yarbro and Sen. Sara Kyle, a Memphis Democrat, in opposition.

A separate measure, introduced earlier this year, would close primaries -- requiring party registration in order to vote -- has failed to advance in the legislature since it was last heard in late February.

Read more at TennesseeLookout.com.


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