The future of our democracy is at a crossroads. The right to vote, a fundamental pillar of our country, is under attack. While federal actions threaten to undermine fair elections, Washington State must remain steadfast in protecting and expanding democracy.
Because even in a state with some of the best election laws in the nation, we are at risk. If we are not moving forward, we are moving backward.
For me, this is personal. My parents are Mexican immigrants. I grew up in a town where most of the people looked like me, yet none of our elected officials did. Politics and elections felt like something happening outside our lives.
Many people in my community, despite having the right to vote, rarely exercised it. Not because they didn’t care, but because no one had ever made them feel like their voice mattered.
That is the reality for too many people in this country, particularly in communities of color. And that is exactly what efforts to suppress the vote are designed to do—to make people feel like their voices don’t count. We cannot let this continue to happen.
President Trump’s recent executive order requiring proof of citizenship for voter registration and limiting mail-in ballots is a direct attack on the very foundation of our democracy. These restrictions threaten to disenfranchise millions in Washington alone, particularly those in historically marginalized communities.
We’ve seen this before. From literacy tests and poll taxes to the gutting of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, every gain in voting rights has been met with efforts to roll them back. This is just the latest attempt.
Democracy is fragile. It requires constant shaping, defending, and improvement. We have not arrived at a perfect system. We must act now to protect what so many before us fought for and gain ground.
This is why Washington is leading the way on voting rights and electoral reforms. We passed the Washington Voting Rights Act (WVRA) to ensure fair representation, allowing communities to challenge electoral systems that silence them. We implemented same-day registration and pre-registration for young voters, making it easier for every eligible Washingtonian to participate. These are important steps, but they are not enough.
Looking to the future, we must expand Automatic Voter Registration (AVR) to reach more eligible voters. We need a state-level preclearance system, through HB 1710, to ensure jurisdictions with a history of discrimination against its own residents do not make changes that disenfranchise voters.
We must pass HB 1381 to expand language access at the ballot and continue efforts to meet voters where they are by permitting local governments to implement on-cycle elections (HB 1339) and ranked choice voting (HB 1448). And we must ensure that people with past convictions are not denied their right to participate in our democracy.
Democracy is the through line of our nation’s progress. The fight for suffrage—from women’s right to vote, to the Voting Rights Act, to today’s battle against voter suppression—has always determined who has a seat at the table. It determines who is represented in the halls of power that govern our lives. We cannot take it for granted.
Every attack on democracy or voting rights is an attack on the issues we care about—education, healthcare, climate, justice. If people cannot vote, they cannot hold leaders accountable or shape their own future.
The work we do today determines the strength of our democracy for generations to come. The right to vote should not depend on how many obstacles you can overcome to cast a ballot. It is given in the U.S. Constitution.
Washington must keep leading. Communities must keep fighting. To make this vision a reality, get involved in the legislative process and reach out to your local lawmakers.
Most importantly, pay attention to the races that affect you most at the bottom of the ticket. Because when democracy moves forward, we all do.
Rep. Sharlett Mena represents the 29th legislative district, including South Tacoma, Midland, Parkland, and portions of Lakewood and Spanaway. She serves as Chair of the House Committee on State Government & Tribal Relations.
Published at The News Tribune, Friday April 4th.