Current:Home > ScamsAlabama lawmakers approve absentee ballot, anti-diversity, equity and inclusion bills -ProsperityEdge
Alabama lawmakers approve absentee ballot, anti-diversity, equity and inclusion bills
View
Date:2025-04-18 16:17:18
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Alabama lawmakers on Tuesday gave final approval to a bill that would outlaw paid assistance with absentee ballot applications and another that would restrict diversity, equity and inclusion programs at universities and state agencies.
Republicans had named the bills as priorities for the legislative session. The Senate, in votes divided along party lines, agreed to changes made by the House of Representatives. The two bills now go to Gov. Kay Ivey for her signature.
A spokeswoman for Ivey did not immediately respond to a text message seeking comment.
The absentee voting bill would make it a misdemeanor to distribute a pre-filled absentee ballot application to a voter or return another voter’s completed application. It would become a felony to give, or receive, a payment or gift “for distributing, ordering, requesting, collecting, completing, prefilling, obtaining, or delivering a voter’s absentee ballot application.”
Republicans said it is needed to combat voter fraud through “ballot harvesting,” a term for the collection of multiple absentee ballots. Democrats argued that there is no proof that ballot harvesting exists and called it an attempt to suppress voting by absentee ballot.
“Any person can still get anyone’s help with applications, but no part of that application can be pre-filled. That’s all,” Republican Sen. Garlan Gudger, the bill’s sponsor, said. “There’s a lot of pressure when some people say, ‘I want you to vote this way,’ and give them an application. You can’t do that. You have to have it blank,” Gudger said.
Democrats and several advocacy groups said the legislation is aimed at trying to make it harder for people vote by absentee ballot.
“It’s just another voter suppression. It’s just a means of suppressing certain people from having the ability and right to access to the free flowing of the vote,” Senate Minority Leader Bobby Singleton said.
Jerome Dees, Alabama policy director for the Southern Poverty Law Center Action Fund, said in a statement that the “cruel legislation aims to criminalize the charitable acts of good Samaritans across the state, whether from neighbors, church members, nursing home staffers, or prison chaplains.”
Republican lawmakers across the country have pushed initiatives that would restrict diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, also known as DEI. The Alabama legislation would prohibit universities, K-12 school systems and state agencies from sponsoring DEI programs, defined under the bill as classes, training, programs and events where attendance is based on a person’s race, sex, gender identity, ethnicity, national origin or sexual orientation.
The bill sparked lengthy debate in the House of Representatives earlier this month.
Republicans said they are trying to guard against programs that “deepen divisions,” but Black Democrats called it an effort to roll back affirmative action programs that welcome and encourage diversity.
The bill says schools, universities and state agencies cannot require students, employees and contractors to attend classes and training sessions “that advocates for or requires assent” to what the bill lists as eight “divisive concepts.” The list of banned concepts includes that “any individual should accept, acknowledge, affirm, or assent to a sense of guilt, complicity, or a need to apologize on the basis of his or her race, color, religion, sex, ethnicity, or national origin.”
The bill also would attempt to prohibit transgender people on college campuses from using multiple occupancy restrooms that correspond with their current gender identity.
The legislation says colleges and universities “shall ensure that every multiple occupancy restroom be designated for use by individuals based” on the sex that a person was assigned at birth. It is unclear how the requirement would be enforced.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- Divers retrieve 80-pound brass bell from first U.S. Navy destroyer ever sunk by enemy fire
- Why the largest transgender survey ever could be a powerful rebuke to myths, misinformation
- Untangling the 50-Part Who TF Did I Marry TikTok
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- The Excerpt podcast: Can Beyoncé convince country music she belongs?
- Florida defies CDC in measles outbreak, telling parents it's fine to send unvaccinated kids to school
- Watch melted during atomic blast over Hiroshima sells for more than $31,000
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Love Island USA: Get Shady With These Sunglasses From the Show
Ranking
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- 3 University of Wyoming swimmers killed in highway crash in Colorado
- Stock market today: Global stocks advance after Nvidia sets off a rally on Wall Street
- Federal Reserve officials caution against cutting US interest rates too soon or too much
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Texas AG Ken Paxton sues Catholic migrant aid organization for alleged 'human smuggling'
- Who has the power to sue Brett Favre over welfare money? 1 Mississippi Republican sues another
- What’s next after the Alabama ruling that counts IVF embryos as children?
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
The Excerpt podcast: Restoring the Klamath River and a way of life
I'm dating my coworker. Help!
Amy Schumer Calls Out Critics Who Are “Mad” She’s Not Thinner and Prettier
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift’s Love Is Burning Red at Sydney Eras Tour in Australia
Why Meta, Amazon, and other 'Magnificent Seven' stocks rallied today
ESPN's Kirk Herbstreit, Chris Fowler and more will be in EA Sports College Football video game