SCDMV fixes computer glitch that blocked voter registration for thousands of teenagers

SCDMV fixes computer glitch that blocked voter registration for thousands of teenagers

Type: 
Press Mention
Date of Release or Mention: 
Monday, April 7, 2025

News 2 (Charleston)

By Sophie Brams

The South Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles (SCDMV) confirmed Monday it has fixed a computer glitch that caused thousands of teenagers’ voter registration not to be processed ahead of last November’s election.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) sued the SCDMV weeks before the Nov. 5 general election, alleging that the agency unlawfully denied thousands of first-time voters the opportunity to register to vote. They claimed more than 17,000 South Carolinians who were 17 when they attempted to register but would have reached legal voting age by Election Day were impacted.

According to the State Election Commission, the SCDMV system was unable to send applications automatically to the election office for individuals who were not yet 18 when the application was completed.

Though DMV employees are trained to inform individuals within that age group that the registration application will not go through the state election office and to use an alternate method, some prospective voters were not notified.

The ACLU argued those individuals should have been added to the state’s voter rolls as guaranteed by the National Voter Registration Act of 1993, which requires certain government agencies that provide public assistance to offer voter registration services.

A circuit court judge ultimately denied the ACLU’s motion, refusing to reopen voter registration for the 1,900 affected teens.

But that wasn’t the end of it.

The ACLU, South Carolina League of Women Voters, and SC NAACP wrote a letter to the SCDMV on March 26, threatening legal action if the agency failed to “swiftly fix” the issue.

The agency responded the next day, indicating that it had resolved the glitch so that its system would now send voter registration information for individuals 16 years and older to the State Election Commission 

Read the full article at the link above. 

League to which this content belongs: 
South Carolina