At issuе is the right of prisoners, incarcerated in Massachusetts, to register to vote in State elections by absentee ballot. Relying principally on art. 3 of the Amendments to the Constitution of the Commonwealth, 3 the plaintiffs, two long-term prisoners at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution, Walpole, commenced this action сhallenging G. L. c. 51, §§ 42-47R, and G. L. c. 54. The prisoners claim that, due to their incarceration, they cannot register to vote, and thus they are denied the right to vote.
The plaintiffs requested that a class of prisoners be certified, and that declaratory and injunctive relief be granted so that prisoners could participate in the Nоvember 2, 1982, State elections. The judge denied injunctive relief and declined to certify the class. The judge declared that prisoners who have failed to register prior to their incarceration, or who are not incarcerated in the municipality of their domicil, could not register to vote by absentee ballot bеcause they must register to vote in person.
4
See G. L. c. 51, § 42. The plaintiffs appealed. We granted the plaintiffs’ application for direct appellate review. We conclude that the
We summarize the facts. The plaintiff, Richard Cepulonis, is serving a sentence of from fifty-eight to eighty-two years at M.C.I., Walpole, and will be eligible for parole in 1997. He has never registered to vote in any city or town. Kevin Murphy, the othеr plaintiff, is serving a sentence of from fifteen to twenty years and will be eligible for parole in 1985. He, too, has never registered as a voter.
In August, 1982, both plaintiffs attempted to register to vote. Cepulonis communicated with the city clerk of Worcester, claiming Worcester as his domicil. Murphy communicated with similar authorities in Boston. Officials in both cities refused to register them on the grounds that no absentee voter registration process is available in Massachusetts, and that they may not vote by absentee ballot without registering in person. The plaintiffs then instituted this action, claiming that their inability to register creates an unconstitutional deprivation of their right to vote in State elections. 5
The narrow issue raised by the plaintiffs is whether the Constitution of the Commonwealth requires that a registration procedure be provided for prisoners domiciled in Massachusetts so that they can register to vote in State elections even though they are incarcerated.
6
In reviewing the рlaintiffs’ constitutional claim, we bear in mind that voting statutes may not be interpreted so as “to defeat or impair the right of voting, but rather [must] facilitate and secure the exercise of that right.”
Kinneen
v.
Wells,
“The purpose of the Declaration of Rights was to announce great and fundamental principles, to govern the action of those who make and those who administer the law . . . .”
Foster
v.
Morse,
We turn to the constitutional and statutory scheme concerning absentee ballots. In 1917, art. 45 of the Amendments to thе Massachusetts Constitution was adopted, giving the Legislature the power to provide for voting by absentee ballot for all qualified voters unable to vote in person due to absence from their domicils. Through the years the Legislature has sought to preserve and extend the right to vote by the use of absentee ballots. The Lеgislature first extended
The Commonwealth’s statutory scheme implementing the right to vote by absentee ballot requires voter registration by affidavit in person. G. L. c. 51, § 42. No provision is made in G. L. c. 51 for registrars to visit potential voters, except in a few specifically delineated situations. The registrars must visit a physically disabled person who requests such a visit in writing, G. L. c. 51, § 42A, and the registrars must hold registration sessions in local schools, places of employment, hospitals and other gathering places within the town upon petition. G. L. c. 51, §§ 42B, 42C. Registration sessions may also be held at regional high schools, colleges, or universities anywhere in the Commonwealth, where there are persons entitled to be registered in that city or town. G. L. c. 51, § 42D. Finally, “Federal service personnel,” who are otherwise qualified to vote in the district,
Under this statutory framework, a prisoner incarcerated in a municipality other than his or her domicil who has not previously registered to vote is not able to register while in prison. It is settled that a prisoner whose domicil happens to be the municipality of the prison may register under G. L. c. 51, § 42B. However, a prisoner domiciled elsewhere cannot automatically change his or her domicil to the situs of the prison, but may only rebut the presumption that the town where the prison is located is not his or her domicil.
Dane
v.
Registrars of Voters of Concord, supra
at 165. A prisoner’s ability to rebut that presumption is extremely limited. See
Ramos
v.
Registrars of Voters of Norfolk,
Recognizing that, when it defends the constitutionality of a statute impinging on fundamental rights, “the State must demonstrate affirmatively that the challenged provision promotes a compelling State interest which could not be achieved in any less restrictive manner,”
Massachusetts Pub. Interest Research Group
v.
Secretary of the Commonwealth,
The fact that for some prisoners there was once an opportunity to register, аnd they failed to do so, does not in our view support an absentee ballot system that has the effect of disenfranchising a group of prospective voters for long periods of time.
Rosario
v.
Rockefeller,
We conclude that а judgment should be entered declaring that a prisoner domiciled in Massachusetts who is unable to register to vote while in prison must be given the means to vote in State elections. Thus, to the extent that G. L. c. 51 and c. 54 prevent prisoners domiciled in Massachusetts from registering to vote, they are unconstitutional. See
Bowe
v.
Secretary of the Commonwealth,
We refrain from оrdering affirmative relief. Legislation providing for an absentee registration process “is primarily a matter for legislative consideration and determination, and
We leave open the question whether the particular plaintiffs are qualified to register in their claimed domicils. See
Ramos
v.
Registrars of Voters of Norfolk,
The judgment in the Superior Court is reversed, and a new judgment is to be entered declaring the rights of the parties consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
Article 3 of the Amendments to the Massachusetts Constitution, as amended through art. 100 of the Amendments, reads as follows: “Every citizen of eighteen years of age and upwards, excepting persons under guardiаnship and persons temporarily or permanently disqualified by law because of corrupt practices in respect to elections who shall have resided within the town or district in which he may claim a right to vote, six calendar months next preceding any election of Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Senators or Representatives, shall have a right to vote in such election of Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Senators and Representatives; and no other person shall be entitled to vote in such election.” See arts. 1-9 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights.
After the Superior Court judge denied relief, the plaintiffs requested an immediate review of the decision. This court denied that request on October 15,1982. A single justice denied the plaintiffs’ motion for an injunction pending appeal on October 21, 1982. Several days later, the plaintiffs filed a motion for injunctive relief with Justice Brennan of the United States Supreme Court for immediate implementation оf an absentee voter registration process prior to the November 2, 1982, Massachusetts general election. Justice Brennan denied the motion without prejudice, and Justice Stevens referred the matter to the full bench of the United States Supreme Court, which denied the plaintiffs’ request that the State be ordered to allow prisoners to participate in the November 2,1982, election.
The States regulate all elections except those for President and Vice President. In presidential elections, Congress has provided an absentee registration procedure. See 42 U.S.C. § 1973aa-1(f) (1976).
A State may, without violating the Federal Constitution, disеnfranchise persons convicted of crimes and deprive them of the right to vote in State elections.
Richardson
v.
Ramirez,
General Laws c. 54, § 86, prohibits the absentee ballot to voters in penal institutions. An early claim in this case, by one of the original plaintiffs, Frank Soffen, challenged that provision and asserted the right of properly registеred inmates to vote by absentee ballot. The claim was abandoned. The Commonwealth no longer disputes the right of prisoners who are registered voters to use absentee ballots.
In its decisions, the Supreme Court of the United States also has recognized that registration is essential to the voters’ ability to exercisе the franchise. See
O’Brien
v.
Skinner,
The Commonwealth correctly does not argue that prisoners should be denied the franchise based on the possible content of their vote. See
The Commonwealth could place prisoner registration entirely in the hands of the office of the State Secretary rather than in the hands оf local authorities. If it chooses to use the current system, the Commonwealth could require local registrars to visit prisons in the same way they travel to regional schools to register students, see G. L. c. 51, § 42D, or each prisoner could be transported to the town he claims as his domicil in order to register. A combination of both methods, depending on cost and effectiveness, also could be used. For example, if a large number of a municipality’s residents are incarcerated together in a prison located outside the municipality, its registrars could travel to that prison, and the municipality could use an absentee process whiсh could include an interview with a public official or employee in those prisons holding fewer of the municipality’s domiciliaries. Any of these methods, or a combination of them, could include some face-to-face questioning which the State claims is essential to prevent voter fraud.
The Commonwealth could permit prisoners to register by an absentee process or to vote in the same manner as Federal service personnel. See G. L. c. 54, §§ 103B, 103C. While the absentee ballot process would not give the registrars a chance for an in-person interview, more exhaustive information than is usually requested could be required to prevent fraud and to establish each prisoner’s domicil. Such information could include past addresses, prior voter registration, licenses, bank accounts, schools attended, past employment, family addresses, court, probation, and correction records, and the like. The prisoners are in the custody of the Commonwealth, and the Legislature could provide for local or State police to verify the identity of the prisoner and the claim of domicil.
Once a registration process designed to prevent fraud is enacted, the notary requirement and other procedures surrounding the absentee ballot process ensure the integrity of the election. See
McCavitt
v.
Registrars of Voters of Brockton,
