TRENTON, N.J. — A New Jersey Assembly committee advanced sweeping election legislation Thursday that would create a new independent Division of Voting Rights, expand protections for voters, and give the state broader authority to review local election changes before they take effect.
The Assembly State and Local Government Committee approved a substitute version of Assembly Bill 1715, titled the “John R. Lewis Voter Empowerment Act of New Jersey.”
The proposal would overhaul several parts of the state’s election framework by strengthening voting access protections, establishing new standards for local election practices, and requiring some municipalities and counties to obtain state approval for future election-related changes.
The bill would also remove the New Jersey Attorney General from direct enforcement of state election laws in these matters and instead place oversight authority under the newly created Division of Voting Rights.
Bill Expands Voting Protections Across New Jersey
Under the legislation, New Jersey courts and election officials would be required to interpret voting laws “liberally” in favor of protecting ballot access and voter participation.
The bill states that election policies could not unnecessarily deny or limit voting rights and would prohibit local governments from maintaining election systems that dilute the voting strength of protected racial, ethnic, or language-minority groups.
Lawmakers said the measure aims to increase participation in elections while ensuring minority communities have equitable access to voter registration and voting opportunities.
The legislation also establishes legal standards for determining whether voting rights violations occurred, including claims involving vote dilution or barriers to participation.
New Oversight Division Would Replace Attorney General’s Role
One of the bill’s most significant changes would create an independent Division of Voting Rights responsible for enforcing state election laws and overseeing compliance with the proposed act.
Currently, those responsibilities largely fall under the New Jersey Attorney General.
The proposed division would have authority to investigate alleged violations, issue subpoenas, gather evidence, and pursue legal action in court. Courts could impose remedies ranging from election system changes to revised district maps if violations are found.
The legislation also creates a formal notification and remediation process allowing political subdivisions to address alleged violations before litigation proceeds.
If local governments fail to implement corrective actions within specified timelines, the bill would require coordination with the Division of Voting Rights to resolve disputes.
—
Key Points
• Assembly committee advances the “John R. Lewis Voter Empowerment Act of New Jersey”
• Bill would create an independent Division of Voting Rights to oversee elections
• Certain municipalities and counties could face new preclearance requirements for election changes
—
Preclearance Rules Could Affect Local Governments
The bill would establish a state-level “preclearance” system similar to provisions once enforced under the federal Voting Rights Act before portions were struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2013.
Under the proposal, political subdivisions with histories of voting-rights violations or certain demographic and election participation patterns could be required to seek state approval before changing election procedures.
Those changes could include:
- Polling place hours and locations
- Voter registration practices
- Election district boundaries
- Early voting procedures
- Election methods and scheduling
The bill also requires local governments to submit districting and at-large election plans for review following each federal census.
Political subdivisions could become subject to preclearance after court rulings, government enforcement actions, consent decrees, or findings involving violations of voting rights protections.
Language Assistance Requirements Expanded
The legislation would require expanded election assistance for language-minority groups in qualifying jurisdictions.
Under the bill, local election offices would need to provide translated voting materials and assistance when certain population thresholds are met based on Census Bureau data or comparable public data.
The proposal requires election materials in covered languages to match the quality of English-language materials and includes oral assistance requirements for commonly spoken dialects within affected communities.
The Division of Voting Rights would also conduct studies every two years to determine whether additional jurisdictions must provide language assistance.
Public Database and Legal Enforcement Included
The legislation would require New Jersey to create a publicly accessible elections database maintained by the Division of Elections within the Department of State.
The bill additionally allows lawsuits from individuals, advocacy groups, organizations representing affected voters, or the Division of Voting Rights itself.
Courts hearing such cases could order remedies deemed necessary to address violations, including changes otherwise restricted under current law.
According to the committee statement, the bill’s stated goals include encouraging voter participation, protecting voters from intimidation and deceptive practices, improving demographic and election data availability, and ensuring equal political participation opportunities for minority groups.
Assembly Bill 1715 now moves forward in the legislative process for additional consideration in the New Jersey Legislature.