/r/savethevote
An organized effort to protect and increase voting rights in the United States
Save The Vote is an outgrowth of the /r/keep_track community.
Save the Vote strives to increase awareness of efforts to:
limit the right/ability to vote
create a more unequal system
At the same time, we work to promote the positive:
Our goal is to make voting free, fair, and easy. Every citizen should have equal access to cast a ballot of equal worth.
Topics for Save the Vote include:
vote suppression (eg voter ID laws, absentee ballots)
voter registration (eg purging voter rolls)
Voting Rights Act (and discrimination)
disenfranchisement (eg felon voting)
gerrymandering (redistricting)
Census
election administration (eg technical failure, human error)
foreign election interference as it applies to security of the vote
money in politics as it relates to voting
Efforts to create a free and fair system - include the positive!
See “Resources” below for definitions and explanations of these topics
Information requests require mod pre-approval: always Google first, then message mods
1. THREAD RELEVANCE |
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Serious posts only - no memes or shitposts. Content must relate to U.S. voting rights and/or U.S. elections. If you're not sure if your post fits here, ask a moderator. |
1A. No cross-posts |
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Cross-posts will be removed. Please submit direct links to the article/video/content. If your cross-post is removed, please re-submit as a direct link. |
1B. Limit duplicates |
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In order to reduce redunancy and clutter, please check to see if there is an article already posted on the topic you want to share. For instance, we'd like to avoid having articles from CBS, ABC, and CNN on the same news event. UNLESS an article adds information or perspective that the existing article(s) lack. Mods will remove posts that are judged to be redundant. |
2. STAY NON-PARTISAN & FACT-BASED |
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The right to vote belongs to every citizen, regardless of political affiliation (or lack thereof). Please refrain from extreme partisan statements. Promoting a party or candidate for reasons other than their record on voting rights will derail the conversation and can result in a ban. Impartial sources supported by objective facts are required for all assertions and arguments. |
3. OPINION-CENTRIC POSTS |
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Opinion may be allowed in posts only with strong supporting arguments and multiple non-biased sources. Moderators reserve the right to determine the relevance of opinion-centric posts. Baseless speculation is prohibited. |
4. USE COMMON SENSE |
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Please use common sense: No name-calling. Don't be incivil - respectful disagreement is fine. Don't incite violence - even if you think it's obvious you're kidding. |
5. IMMEDIATE BANS |
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Anyone who supports voter suppression measures; partakes in obvious trolling, demoralizing pessimism; or uses intentional propaganda techniques or disinformation tactics will be subject to an immediate permanent ban. |
National Conference of State Legislatures' online voter registration in your state
Vote.org's one click register to vote online.
US Gov Guide to Absentee Voting Information for U.S. Citizens Abroad
a. ACLU’s Facts About Voter Suppression
a. House Judiciary Committee Holds Hearing on the Voting Rights Act
a. How the Political Map Is Likely to Shift After the 2020 Census
Message /u/rusticgorilla to join our Discord
/r/keep_track - for investigations into the Trump administration
/r/yall_qaeda - for tracking far right domestic terrorism
/r/45chaos - for tracking turnover in the Trump administration
Forensic News - Investigative journalism wirth receipts
/r/savethevote
You can request your ballot at: https://www.votefromabroad.org/
In recent elections, the overseas vote has determined the winner in many close races, so your vote does actually count.
https://www.npr.org/2022/11/06/1132730832/american-citizens-voters-overseas-abroad
Also, if you know someone who was born in the US or has American parents, they can also vote in US elections.
This post is intended to be non-partisan, simply showing how to exercise your voting rights even when abroad.
Thanks!
My name is Ashwani Jain, and I am running for Congress in Maryland’s 6th Congressional District which represents Western Maryland including Northern Montgomery County as well as Frederick, Washington, Allegany, and Garrett Counties.
I am a former White House official, published author, and cancer survivor, and while I would be Maryland’s first Millennial and first Asian-American ever elected to represent Maryland in Congress, I am specifically running because I have strong policy solutions to open the doors of opportunity for my community.
This is an open seat with no incumbent and Maryland's Primary election is on the 14th of May.
Some of my top Election Reform priorities include:
Please feel free to ask any questions regarding my policies, the Congressional election, my experience campaigning, or anything else!
You can find out more at JainForCongress.com or at my Subreddit r/JainForCongress
"Despite prevailing narratives following the 2022 election, more anti-democracy actors were elected to office last year. At the local level, where officials’ hands are literally and figuratively closest to our ballots, potential threats are growing in number and strength.
In 2022, challenges to our democracy were widespread at the local level and carried out by the people we entrust with the responsibility for administering our elections.
These threats are growing in strength as misguided officials continue to peddle lies about non-existent fraud, probe for vulnerabilities in election law and process, and undermine public confidence about the security of future elections.
Our report looks at 204 of these officials, as a part of our effort to shine a spotlight on the people and processes that determine how our votes are counted and elections certified."
https://www.informingdemocracy.org/research-library/democracy-under-threat
This week, two important voting cases — where pro-voting outcomes prevailed in court just a few months ago — were back before the North Carolina Supreme Court. We summarized what went down in the unprecedented rehearings of Harper v. Hall and Holmes v. Moore.
Plus, New Mexico’s omnibus bill expanding voting access heads to the governor for her signature. In Connecticut, lawmakers proposed a state-level Voting Rights Act (VRA) this week, the third state VRA to be introduced over the past year (Michigan hopes to join that list soon). But what does it mean to have a state VRA? We explore what state-level legal protections look like in an era defined by an increasingly weakened federal VRA.
Two Unprecedented North Carolina Rehearings on Display in Court
“The legislative defendants play a cynical game, hoping that this newly constituted court will reverse course and abdicate its fundamental duty of judicial review,” a lawyer for pro-voting groups said in front of the North Carolina Supreme Court on Tuesday.
The state’s highest court was rehearing Harper v. Hall, a previously decided redistricting lawsuit challenging North Carolina’s congressional and legislative maps drawn with 2020 census data. (The case is also the precursor to the pending U.S. Supreme Court case, Moore v. Harper, that raises the radical independent state legislature theory.) In the state case, the North Carolina Supreme Court struck down the Legislature-drawn congressional and legislative maps for being partisan gerrymanders in February 2022 and later, in December 2022, struck down the remedial state Senate map.
Just how procedurally messy are Harper v. Hall and Moore v. Harper**?** The overlapping timelines bounce between two levels of state court and the U.S. Supreme Court and involve three different redistricting maps. The North Carolina Supreme Court’s decision to rehear Harper further complicated matters.
Just months after the most recent decision, the same court is reconsidering its opinion. Nothing has changed in the facts of the case nor the case law surrounding partisan gerrymandering in North Carolina. The only fact that has changed is that Republicans have flipped the court from a 4-3 Democratic majority to a 5-2 Republican majority following the 2022 midterms.
While Harper’s rehearing has gained significant attention for its direct impact on the Tar Heel State’s redistricting maps and less clear-cut impact on a landmark U.S. Supreme Court case, the North Carolina Supreme Court granted rehearing in one more voting case: Holmes v. Moore. In Holmes, a trial court struck down a 2018 law that severely limited the list of acceptable photo IDs for voting, ruling that it was enacted with the intent to discriminate against Black voters in violation of the North Carolina Constitution. The court found that Black voters are 39% more likely to lack qualifying ID than white voters. The North Carolina Supreme Court, with its then-Democratic majority, agreed.
New Mexico Legislature Approves Major Pro-Voting Reforms
This week, the New Mexico Legislature sent the New Mexico Voting Rights Act to the desk of Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham (D) for her signature. The omnibus, pro-voting bill makes a handful crucial reforms. Notably, upwards of 11,000 New Mexicans on parole or probation will regain voting rights upon enactment, building upon the rights restoration success in Minnesota. Once signed by Lujan Grisham, the bill will:
New Mexico’s legislative session adjourns tomorrow, but the state made important strides in protecting and expanding voting rights access.
Several States Look To Pass Their Own Voting Rights Acts
While New Mexico calls its pro-voting bill a Voting Rights Act (VRA), there is a distinction between omnibus bills that expand voting access and state-level VRAs. A state VRA is characterized by the way it empowers voters through the legal system. These bills often include preclearance processes that mirror the now-defunct Section 5 of the federal VRA, strengthen the legal bases for challenging unfair election laws and more.
In fact, five states — California, New York, Oregon, Virginia and Washington — have VRAs. At least four more states are looking to enact one this session: Connecticut, Maryland, Michigan and New Jersey.
Since its enactment in 1965, the federal VRA has been a landmark achievement for American democracy. Over the past 10 years, however, this has changed. In 2013, the U.S. Supreme Court gutted Section 5, which required states or counties with histories of discriminatory voting practices to receive approval from the U.S. Department of Justice before enacting new changes. In 2021, the Court weakened Section 2 of the VRA, another crucial protection against denying or diluting the voting rights of minority voters. Section 2 might be further eroded by the end of this Supreme Court term in Merrill v. Milligan, a redistricting case out of Alabama.
In light of this unfortunate reality, states are increasingly looking to enact their own state-level protections. “With a lot of voting rights organizations, there's a huge focus on state-level democracy and elections,” Lucas Rodriguez, a student in the Election Law Clinic at Harvard Law School, told Democracy Docket. “There’s not as much effort on the sub-state level, even though local governments play a huge role in our lives.” State VRAs increase the attention on smaller jurisdictions and the myriad of ways that day-to-day policy is shaped by local officials. For example, the Maryland VRA arose from frustration with Baltimore County’s redistricting in 2021.
Learn more about state VRAs here.
New Lawsuit Challenges Florida’s “Wet Signature” Rule
Yesterday, Vote.org, a nonpartisan registration and get-out-the-vote nonprofit, filed its third lawsuit against a technical element of voter registration or mail-in voting requests known as a “wet signature” requirement.
In Florida, a rule has been on the books since 2005 that requires individuals registering to vote to submit their voter registration application with an “original signature.” The plaintiffs in a new lawsuit filed yesterday — Vote.org, the Florida Alliance for Retired Americans and the Florida State Conference of the NAACP — argue that Florida election officials have interpreted “original signature” to mean signed with pen on paper and have rejected valid applications received via email or fax with an electronic signature.
Vote.org is also currently challenging Georgia’s “wet signature” requirement for mail-in voting applications and Texas’ “wet signature” requirement for voter registration. In all three lawsuits, the plaintiffs argue that this rule — which may disenfranchise otherwise eligible voters who lack access to a printer — violates the Materiality Provision of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits denying “the right of any individual to vote in any election because of an error or omission…if such error or omission is not material in determining whether such individual is qualified.”
It’s not always the flashiest law or the most well-known or understandable provision that deters voters. The mundane, technical details can have equally devastating impacts on access to the ballot box — groups like Vote.orgrecognize the importance of dismantling all barriers, big and small.
Where We’re Watching: Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi and South Dakota
We’re keeping a close eye on Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi and South Dakota, the next four Republican-controlled states to end their legislative sessions. This means legislation should be moving quickly and onto governors in the next two weeks.
In Arkansas, bills that have passed both chambers include:
In Georgia, Senate Bill 222 passed the first chamber. The bill would create a new felony offense for election officials who accept private grants for funding election administration.
In Mississippi, bills that have passed both chambers include:
In South Dakota, bills that have passed one or both chambers include:
More News
NOTE: The preceding is a copy/paste from Democracy Docket's weekly 'On The Docket' email newsletter. I am in no way affiliated with them, I simply find their email newsletters useful for tracking ongoing voting rights topics. If you'd like to find more info concerning their efforts towards securing voting rights you can visit https://www.democracydocket.com