Boston City Council Passes Ordnance To Lower Voting Age To 16
By State House News Service | December 1, 2022, 15:42 EST
By Sam Drysdale
State House News Service
If you’re old enough to drive, you’re old enough to vote, the majority of Boston city councilors decided Wednesday, bringing 16-and 17-year-olds one step closer to enfranchisement in the city.
By a 9-4 vote, councilors passed a petition to allow Boston residents ages 16 and 17 to vote in municipal elections, as long as they meet all other legal qualifications.
“We have a lot of young people who are working — oftentimes two jobs — just to help support their families, paying taxes and on the front lines protesting and trying to find ways to have their voices heard. And every day we make decisions on their behalf,” said city councilor Julia Mejia, who co-sponsored the petition.
Mostly supported by the council’s growing number of progressive members, the docket now makes its way to Mayor Michelle Wu’s desk. If Wu signs off on the home rule petition, it will be sent to the Massachusetts Legislature. The measure needs legislative approval to take effect.
Mejia expressed some concern about the petition gaining state approval, saying: “We know what happens at the State House — most things go there to die.”
“I believe that this is an opportunity for us to organize other municipalities across the state and then create the groundswell of support that this initiative deserves and that is led by young people,” she said.
Several communities, including Ashfield, Brookline, Cambridge, Concord, Lowell, Northampton, Shelburne, Somerville, and Wendell, have all sought legislation to lower the voting age in municipal elections in the past.
In 2019, state lawmakers introduced twin bills (Massachusetts House Bill 720 and Massachusetts Senate Bill 389) to grant municipal governments the power to lower the voting age in their communities without individually seeking home rule petitions.
Dubbed the EMPOWER Act by supporters, both the House and Senate versions of the bill sat for about a year in the Joint Committee on Election Laws before that panel held a public hearing on the proposals. No action was taken at the end of the 2019-2020 legislative session.
Boston city councilor Liz Breadon said she hopes to work with the Boston delegation at the State House this upcoming session to pass the law.
In the current session, lawmakers introduced seven bills that would lower the voting age across the state that have not made it to final passage with only about one month left in the two-year session.
The Election Laws Committee forwarded four home rule petitions to lower the voting age to study this year, for the municipalities of Northampton, Brookline, Somerville, and Wendell. The committee also sent to study the seven statewide bills that would lower the voting age across the state.
The Election Laws Committee’s focus this session was on getting the so-called VOTES Act passed, which made permanent the mail-in and early voting options that proved popular during the pandemic, said a spokesman for state Senator Barry Finegold (D-Andover), who serves as the chairman of the committee.
Asked if the home rule petitions to lower voter age requirements or the EMPOWER Act were on the committee’s to-do list for the upcoming session, the spokesman said they could not speak to the committee’s future filings.
Boston city councilor Kenzie Bok said the Boston home rule petition would, if passed, help young people develop the habit of voting at an early age and learn more about civic engagement.
“I think that if we give our young folks a chance to start forming that voting habit when they’re 16 or 17, when they’re still rooted in the communities that they lived their whole life in … that’s actually how you build that civic habit that really leads to lifelong civic engagement,” she said.
The councilors at-large were split, with Michael Flaherty and Erin Murphy voting against the petition, and Mejia and Ruthzee Louijeune voting in favor of the measure. Other Yes votes included Gabriela Coletta, Brian Worrell, Ricardo Arroyo, Kendra Lara, Tania Fernandes Anderson, Bok, and Breadon. City Council President Ed Flynn and city councilor Frank Baker voted against the measure.
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