Voters with disabilities are feeling ignored by presidential candidates

FILE - A woman in a motorized wheelchair casts her vote at the Waikiki Community Center in Honolulu, on Tuesday, Nov. 4 2008. (AP Photo/Marco Garcia, File)

A new report from Rutgers University estimates that about 40.2 million eligible voters in the quickly approaching U.S. presidential election are disabled. Add those who cohabitate with people who have a disability, and you’re looking at close to one-third of the voting population for an election in which health care is among the key campaign issues.

The disabled voting bloc is growing as the U.S. population ages, but voters and advocates say the hurdles that make people feel excluded from the electoral process aren’t being addressed. That ranges from inaccessible campaign materials to former and seldomly mentioning how issues like COVID-19 impact the disability community, as well as that advocacy groups considered discriminatory.

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