sathari: (Waiting for ourselves)
[personal profile] sathari
It's National Voter Registration Day! To honor the day, here are a grab-bag of links to sites where you can check your voter registration and/or register to vote:

Change.TurboVote.org

Common Cause

Healthcare Voter

National Voter Registration Day

I Will Vote

Human Rights Campaign

And, yes, I know these all pretty much do the same thing, but this way if one site is down, or if you want to give traffic to a particular organization, or if you're working a voter registration drive with a specific theme or group attached, you can pick the one or ones that work best for your needs. (Mods, do we need a "2024 election" tag?)

sathari: (Waiting for ourselves)
[personal profile] sathari
VoteRiders--- yes, the name is a shout-out to the Freedom Riders of the Civil Rights Movement--- is a non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to helping people get the documentation they need in order to register to vote and to register to vote. They’re focusing on states with the strictest voter ID laws (their target states are Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas and Wisconsin) but they are available to help in all 50 states as needed. (FYI to the mods, we don't seem to have a tag for Arizona yet but I've tagged all the other states on which they're focusing.)

This sounds deceptively simple, but it can be complicated, not least because it’s easy, especially in the states with the strictest voter ID laws, to get caught in a “do-loop”--- you need, for example, a birth certificate to get a valid state ID, but you can’t get the birth certificate without proof of your identity. Basically, VoteRiders volunteers help people break through the do-loop to get whatever proofs of identity they need. Also, thanks to their donors, they are able to pay for some of the fees associated with getting ID and other documentation.

One of the “knock-on” benefits of VoteRiders' work is that even though their primary mission is to help people get registered to vote, this kind of documentation is also necessary for a lot of other aspects of people’s lives, like obtaining employment and housing; the organization often works with shelters and transition services for the formerly incarcerated. I am not sure how closely they work with domestic-violence organizations in general, but the first thing that popped into my mind was all the advice given to people living in unstable or dangerous households (whether due to intimate partner or other family abuse or anything else) to keep copies of all your personal paperwork, such as ID, where the people who are making you unsafe can’t get at them. (On that note, the website VoteRiders volunteers often use to help people obtain birth certificates is VitalChek, which you can use directly if you’re in need--- VoteRiders does a lot of this for people who don’t necessarily have reliable access to the internet or similar issues, but if you’re here reading this, that’s probably less of an issue for you or people you know who might need access to documentation.) (Something else I have learned through VoteRiders is that if your mind works that way at all, it's a very good idea to memorize any of your "stable" ID numbers, like your Social Security number and state driver's license/ID number, because sometimes just having the number even if you don't have the physical card anymore, can help, and at least some states can look up your "old" ID number even if you've moved out of state and come back, and this can speed up the process of obtaining relevant documents.)

VoteRiders does its volunteer training online--- they want you to attend at least two virtual “shadowing” sessions with a volunteer who lets you watch while they help people get documents over the phone. More information about volunteer opportunities is here.

(And that's how I spent my Saturday night. Last post here for tonight, I promise.)

sathari: (Waiting for ourselves)
[personal profile] sathari
From DailyKos, A Systemic Approach to Voter Turnout from Hope Springs from Fields. (This is a little old and some of you might have seen it, but I wanted to give it a signal-boost, especially as it is later.)
tanaqui: Illumiinated letter T (Default)
[personal profile] tanaqui
Vote Forward's letter writing campaign for the Georgia senate run-offs is now up and running. They're doing things a little differently for this campaign, so even if you've written letters before, they're asking you to read the instructions carefully!

https://votefwd.org/posts/Georgia-Runoff-campaigns
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
[twitter.com profile] romancingrunoff, started by [twitter.com profile] courtneymilan and [twitter.com profile] kitrocha

Targeting the Georgia run-off elections which will potentially determine control of the Senate!

https://twitter.com/courtneymilan/status/1324787799174774784

To kick it off, we are starting a massive auction/donation drive to benefit Fair Fight, Black Voters Matter, and the New Georgia Project—organizations that were crucial to Georgia’s success this last election.

Note also:

For those who are romance adjacent—most notably our close cousins SFF and YA—we have a very big tent and we welcome anyone!

Come on in. The water is clear blue.


Also bless them, they've got an international donation section which feeds donations to the charitable sibling-organizations of relevant groups (which can legally accept donations from non-US citizens).

Given the astonishing work that's been done in Georgia by founder of Fair Fight Stacey Abrams, a.k.a. romance novelist Selena Montgomery, whose SF/F geek credentials are also beyond question, this seems like a particularly appropriate way to pay tribute and support the fight.
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
https://action.splcenter.org/a/october-15th-splc-power-hour-virtual-phone-bank

Starting Monday, October 12th, registered voters in Georgia can vote in-person before Election Day. Early voting - sometimes referred to as advanced voting - can help Georgia voters avoid crowds or find a time to vote that's better for their schedules in the weeks prior to Election Day. Unlike Election Day, Georgia voters do not have to vote at an assigned polling location during early voting.

For this week's SPLC virtual phone bank, we will be calling newly registered and other voters of color in Georgia to help them find an early voting location nearest them along with the information they need to cast their vote early.
rydra_wong: Grasshopper mouse stands on its hind legs to howl. (turn venom into painkillers)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
https://2020.indivisible.org/

Wake up on November 4 knowing you did everything in your power to make Trump a one-term president.

You can sign up to write letters to voters, to phonebank, and/or to "triple your vote" by pledging to get three people you know to turn out to vote.
sathari: (Waiting for ourselves)
[personal profile] sathari
Some of you may remember this post that I did for the 2018 US midterm elections. This is the 2020 version. I note that with COVID-19, you’ll probably want to check not just by state but by your local-level election authority for details on your own voting; your local Democratic party may be a good resource as well.

I would estimate that at least half the links from last election had changed when I looked them up, so doing this again for this election was definitely not redundant.

Some notes: compared to last election, many of the websites seem a lot more thorough and well-organized; as a result, and in order to speed up my getting this posted, I didn’t spend a lot of time hunting down specific links to referenda and sample ballots--- not least because with COVID-19, enough of us are probably voting by mail that we’ll have the ballots themselves in hand with time to do our research on any “surprise” items in them.

Last but not least, I’m sure just about anyone on this comm probably knows their own state’s online election resources by heart, but if you’ve got friends and family elsewhere who need help, or (especially) if you’re phonebanking or textbanking to people out of state, having a handy guide to their state’s election material might help. (In this the age of cellphones, it’s totally not unheard of to call someone with an area code assigned to one state and find that they’re in another.)

Read more... )
chestnut_pod: A close-up photograph of my auburn hair in a French braid (Default)
[personal profile] chestnut_pod
Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ, an organization for white people to undermine support for white supremacy among other white people) is inaugurating two new sets of weekly phonebanking meetings as we count down to the election! The first set focuses calls on white voters in Pennsylvania and Georgia, while the second are SURJ recruitment calls. The dates are as follows:

August

Saturday Voter Contact Phone Banks: 8th, 22nd
Thursday Recruitment Phone Banks: 13th, 27th

September

Saturday Voter Contact Phone Banks: 5th, 19th
Thursday Recruitment Phone Banks: 10th, 24th

October

Saturday Voter Contact Phone Banks: 3rd, 17th, 31st
Thursday Recruitment Phone Banks: 8th, 22nd

You can register for the first of these actions here, which will also ensure you get reminder emails for subsequent actions.
tanaqui: Illumiinated letter T (Default)
[personal profile] tanaqui
An initiative from Vote Save America (run by Crooked Media, the people behind the Pod Save America podcast):
You don't live in a battleground state. So how do you help out in the states that will determine who wins in 2020? We finally have an answer: No matter where you live, you can directly support the work of organizers, volunteers, and candidates in the six key battleground states that will be most important to delivering a progressive majority in 2020. Just pick a state below, sign up, and we'll get you everything you need to make a big difference this November.
The states are: Arizona, Florida, Michigan, Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Wisconsin.

https://votesaveamerica.com/adopt-a-state/
gingicat: the hands of Doctor Who #10, Martha Jones, and Jack Harkness clasped together with the caption "All for One" (all for one)
[personal profile] gingicat
I was working at the polls yesterday. Read more... )

Now I'm writing to remind everyone that there is another primary in Massachusetts on September 1, for statewide offices and Congressional seats. The deadline to register or change your party affiliation is August 12. Among other offices, the US Senate seat is contested in the Democratic primary. There are not (yet?) early voting dates. See sec.state.ma.us for more information.
tanaqui: Illumiinated letter T (Default)
[personal profile] tanaqui
As a big focus in 2020 will be on various kinds of elections, I've pulled together voting-related resources from the last three (!) years of [community profile] thisfinecrew. Many thanks to all the people who originally brought these links and organisations to the attention of the comm.

Targeted support for progressive candidates

SwingLeft (Lets you volunteer to support progressives in Swing Districts, no matter where you live)
Flippable and Local Majority (Both focused on targeting state legislatures where flipping a few seats can turn them blue -- putting Democrats in charge of the next round of redistricting in 2021)
Get Mitch or Die Trying (Donate to the eventual Democratic nominee in 10 seats that could be flipped and one that needs protecting)
Sister District (Matches volunteers in safe blue places with strategic state elections throughout the country)
Emily's List (Helping pro-choice Democratic women around the country run for office and win.)
Get Her Elected (arranges for volunteers to offer their skills pro bono to progressive women candidates running for office at all levels of U.S. government)
Run for Something (Recruiting and supporting young progressives)
314 Action (Encourages scientists to stand for office and helps them win)
Higher Heights (Investing in a long-term strategy to expand and support Black women’s leadership pipeline at all levels)
The Collective PAC (Supporting African American Candidates)

Get Out The Vote, voting suppression and voting reform

Postcards to Voters (A grassroots organization that sends hand-written postcards to potential progressive voters in competitive districts)
Vote Forward (Send letters to traditionally under-represented voters to encourage them to voite)
National Voter Registration Day (not until September 20, but they need money as well as volunteers)
Moms Vote (Engaging women, especially mothers, to vote through activities like postcard campaigns and phonebanking)
Multiply Your Vote (Volunteering opportunities to encourage people to vote)
ACLU (Various activities and campaigns around voting rights)
Fair Fight 2020 (Helping staff, fund, and train robust Democratic voter protection operations in battleground states)
VoterRiders (Helping every eligible voter to get the ID - and confidence - to vote)
866-OUR-VOTE (Works to advance and defend the right to vote and offers on the day support to people having trouble voting. See this post for details of how speakers of various languages can contact them)
Woke Vote (A collaborative of grassroots organizers in the South registering voters and canvassing neighborhoods)
League of Women Voters (Campaign to fight voter suppression)
Voto Latino (Provides culturally relevant programs that engage, educate and empower Latinos to be agents of change)
Color of Change (Working to raise the level of Black community involvement in the next election cycle)
#Knockeverydoor (Helps volunteers start door-to-door canvasses to help build a majority of voters for progressive causes)
Press for adoption of the National Popular Vote proposal

Keep an eye on your voter registration

Some states are very good at dropping eligible voters off their rolls during "normal" updates, so keep an eye on your registration (and remind others to do so).

You can use Vote.org to check your registration or use this awesome post on US Voter Information put together by [personal profile] sathari to find links to a range of election information for your specific state.

Get involved locally

Why you should join your local political party
Find Democraic Events near you

If you know of any other organisations you think are worth supporting, let us know in comments.
rydra_wong: Grasshopper mouse stands on its hind legs to howl. (turn venom into painkillers)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
Useful for anyone doing door-to-door or phone banking, also potentially useful to think about for people trying to informally drag friends and acquaintances to the polls:

https://twitter.com/KillerMartinis/status/1055482288983674880
starlady: (crew)
[personal profile] starlady
Another way to volunteer to get out the vote in the midterms, especially for the introverted or those not near a swing district: Vote Forward!

You sign up to write letters to unlikely voters sharing your perspective on why voting is important and get reminded to send the letters the week before the election, so there's still plenty of time to sign up. I've mostly been choosing districts in states with competitive Senate or gubernatorial elections, but there are plenty of voters left to write letters to in many different districts. Their data indicates voters who get letters are roughly 3.9% more likely to vote, and every vote counts!

(Note: once you've verified your email address, they don't email you again once you've been confirmed as a letter-writer, so check back within 24 hours. The writing burden is relatively light, as the bulk of the letter is a pre-printed form, but you do need to print the letters and provide your own envelopes and stamps. That said, there are some funds for stamps available if the cost of stamps is a potential dealbreaker! Send them an email and they may be able to help.)
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] redbird
I've been sending some "postcards to voters,", in which volunteers em>hand-write postcards to strangers; if writing hurts your hand, you probably shouldn't be doing this one. Also, you'd be paying for stamps and postcards, but the minimum commitment is only four cards.

The idea behind this is that a hand-written postcard from a stranger, with reasons to vote for a specific candidate, will be effective some of the time. Each postcard urges the recipient to vote for a specific candidate (e.g., Stacey Abrams for governor of Georgia), reminds the recipient when election day is, and has one other mandatory talking point. For one candidate, the mandatory talking points include "An election can sometimes turn on a single vote—make it yours." They also give a long list of optional content, if you have room on the postcard, ranging from campaign promises to "thank you for being a voter." There's some room for paraphrasing, but they're asking us to stick to the campaign's messages.

I've been writing things like "promises to fully fund public schools" and "will expand Medicaid to provide job and rescue rural hospitals" on the postcard (The cards are all going to registered Democrats, if that matters to you.)

This is oddly anonymous: you the writer are given addresses but not names, and above the address, instead of a name, write something neutral [sic] but encouraging, like "Concerned Citizen" or "Valued Voter." There's no return address. and the signature should be a first name or initials: I've been signing mine "Vicki," but there's nothing stopping me from identifying myself as "Victor" or "Natasha" if I feel like it.

[personal profile] rydra_wong suggested I write this up after I mentioned it in a comment; I'm posting this to my own journal and to [community profile] thisfinecrew.
rydra_wong: The display board of a train reads "this train is fucked". (this train is fucked)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
Do you know anyone who might know anyone in North Dakota, etc.?

Summary courtesy of [personal profile] recessional:

Big messy ugly shit is going on but the tl;dr is that currently a way has been found to disenfranchise basically all on-reservation voters in North Dakota, because PO Box addresses are no longer accepted (and quite a LOT of residents of the reservations don't HAVE street addresses as yet). BUT. It turns out there may be a way to get the needed street address that is no-charge and while the whole thing is Kafkaesque IT'S STILL IMPORTANT.

So.


If you think you know anybody in North Dakota who might be able to help this info get where it needs to go (or know someone who might know someone, or so on) PLEASE PASS IT AROUND.

Note from me: this is also a particular attack on a seat with a very vulnerable incumbent Democratic senator, Heidi Heitkamp, who (as you may recall) recently voted "no" on Kavanaugh despite the potential political cost for her.

A senior HuffPo reporter says: Democrats believe this law, which disproportionately impacts Native Americans, was explicitly passed in reaction to Heitkamp’s upset win in 2012.

NYT article on the misogynist shithead running against Heitkamp and her response

Link to donate to her campaign should you feel so moved
rydra_wong: Grasshopper mouse stands on its hind legs to howl. (turn venom into painkillers)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
Mildly terrifying in a Big Data way, but genius:

The VoteWithMe app

Compares your phone contacts with publicly available voter records and tells you which of your friends live in swing districts and might benefit from nudging to get to the polls:

Geekwire: This app shows your friends’ voting history and makes it easy to nudge them to get to the polls

It doesn't contact anyone itself, just tells you who you should try contacting and reminding.

Via [twitter.com profile] Mattyglesias: One of the most effective forms of political action is to contact people who you actually know in real life.

Which I quote mainly so I can also quote this reply: If you want it to catch on, you need to say something like, “hack American politics by leveraging disruptive, closely-knit networks.”

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