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Voter Guide for 1,407,719 Michiganders with Disabilities

Michigan Ranks 40th in the Country on Jobs for People with Disabilities

by Demetrious Lara

In the run up to the 2020 Michigan Democratic primary, the nonpartisan disability rights nonprofit RespectAbility has released its latest Michigan State Voter Guide. According to the recently released 2019 Annual Disability Statistics Compendium, the total number of Michiganders with disabilities is 1,407,719  and they make up 14.2 percent of the population.  

Research conducted in the 2018 election shows that 74 percent of likely voters either have a disability themselves or have a family member or a close friend with disabilities. The upcoming elections and their results will have an impact on people with disabilities, so it is important to become familiar with the candidates’ positions on certain issues.

“Candidates for office ignore the disability community at their peril,” said former U.S. Rep. and Dallas Mayor Steve Bartlett. Bartlett, who was one of the coauthors of the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990, is the chairman of RespectAbility. 

As a nonpartisan national nonprofit organization fighting stigmas and advancing opportunities so people with disabilities can participate fully in all aspects of community, RespectAbility has invited all candidates in the presidential race to submit their answers to a 2020 Disability Voter Candidate Questionnaire. This questionnaire covers some of the most important issues impacting people with disabilities including employment, education, immigration, criminal justice and accessibility. 

Five high-profile candidates submitted their completed questionnaires earlier this year and you can find their responses below:

All responses to the candidate questionnaire will be posted in full on The RespectAbility Report as they come in and will be used to produce and update nonpartisan voter guides in all 50 states. It is the hope of RespectAbility that the remaining candidates will send their responses in soon. 

Accessing the Ballot Box

Polling places in Michigan are required to remove and make accommodations for any barriers that prevent voters with disabilities from voting. This includes making sure doors are not blocked, ramps and elevators be available, and seating be made adequate for use. Voters in Michigan with disabilities can use an election judge or a person of their choice to vote in-person on their behalf, if that person is not the individual’s employer, union representative or a candidate running for office. Michiganders may receive assistance submitting votes by mail, but the person rendering assistance must remain nonpartisan throughout the entire process and have at least two people of differing parties present. Michigan voters can also use a ballot marking machine that can mark a ballot for them automatically. The machine can display the ballot in large print and can even read it aloud through headphones. 

A Focus on Employment

Data from the recently released 2019 Annual Disability Statistics Compendium indicates that there are 730,791 working-age (ages 18-64) people with disabilities living in Michigan. Of this number, only 259,363 are employed. This results in a disability employment rate of 35.5 percent among working-age people with disabilities across the state. The Great Lake State now ranks 40th relative to the 50 states in terms of the gap in the employment rate between working-age people with and without disabilities.  

“The unfortunate fact is that stigma is still a driving factor in why almost two-thirds of working age people with disabilities are unemployed,” said RespectAbility’s Vice President, Communications, Lauren Appelbaum, who also serves as the managing editor of The RespectAbility Report, an online publication at the intersection of disability and politics. “However, there is good news this election cycle, as many of the candidates for the highest office in the land have made their campaigns accessible to people with disabilities. They are including us in their campaigns as staffers and consultants and ensuring that they have well thought-out disability policy plans.”

“The disability community is unique,” added Philip Kahn-Pauli, associate editor of The RespectAbility Report. “It is the only minority group that anyone can join at any time due to illness, injury, or aging. What that means is that there are people with disabilities in every state, and that the community’s interests intersect with so many issues, including race, gender, poverty, criminal justice and inequality.” 

According to a Rutgers University study, 14.3 million citizens with disabilities voted in 2018. Those voters will be crucial as candidates vie for the presidency, as well as state-wide and local elections.

RespectAbility is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that fights stigmas and advances opportunities so that people with disabilities can fully participate in all aspects of their communities. RespectAbility does not rate or endorse candidates. The questionnaire is purely for educational purposes as voters go to the polls. RespectAbility has reached out to all of the presidential campaigns and will be posting all responses on The RespectAbility Report. Learn more about all of the candidates, including those who did not respond to the questionnaire: https://therespectabilityreport.org/2020-presidential-candidates-disability.