Lawmakers voted Tuesday to override Gov. Phil Scott’s veto of charter changes related to voting in two Vermont communities.
Voters in Brattleboro and Burlington voted to expand voting eligibility in their borders � with Brattleboro seeking to lower the voting age in town elections and Burlington seeking to allow residents who are not citizens to vote in its municipal elections.
Youth voting in Brattleboro
Effective immediately, the charter change allows Brattleboro residents aged 16 to and 17 to vote in certain town elections, including Town Meeting Day.
The change also allows people 16 and older to run for and be elected to a town office, such as selectboard.
However, voters under 18 would not be allowed to vote in state or national elections, nor would they be allowed to vote in school board elections.
Brattleboro voters approved the charter change in 2019. Gov. Scott vetoed it last year, and lawmakers failed to override his veto.
This year, Scott vetoed the change again, saying the bill blurs the definition of adulthood in Vermont.
House Minority Leader Pattie McCoy of Poultney voted to sustain the governor’s veto.
“Reducing the age to vote to 16, in light of the fact this body raised the age to 21 for a person to be charged as a juvenile, flies in the face of all logic,� McCoy said Tuesday on the House floor. “If the brain is not fully developed to understand and make the correct decisions relative to a crime, then the brain is not fully developed at 16 to be allowed to vote on decisions affecting their community.�
Rep. Emilie Kornheiser, a Democrat from Brattleboro, pointed out that the charter change had strong support in her district.
On Town Meeting Day in 2019, Brattleboro voters voted 908 to 400 in favor of lowering the voting age.
“I vote ‘yes� today, to stand behind the will of Brattleboro voters and on behalf of young people, who deserve an opportunity to engage deeply in the democratic process as they come of age,� Kornheiser said
Noncitizen voting in Burlington
Burlington voters gave their approval to a resolution on Town Meeting Day this year that also expands voting eligibility in the city.
The charter change expands the definition of a voter to include “any noncitizen who resides on a permanent or indefinite basis in compliance with federal immigration laws.�
Like the Brattleboro charter change, Burlington’s does not apply to statewide or federal elections.
Read more about the charter change here.
Members of the House voted 111 to 36 to override Scott’s veto.
Rep. Barbara Rachelson, a Democrat from Burlington, called the charter change “an important expansion of our city’s voting rights.�No debate in the Senate
Both charter changes sailed through the Senate, with no debate.
Lawmakers in that chamber voted 20 to 10 to override Gov. Scott’s veto of youth voting in Brattleboro, and 21 to 9 to override the governor’s veto of the charter change to allow noncitizen voting in Burlington.
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