Texas
Related: About this forumTexas voter protection efforts-The state party is looking for volunteers
I spent two hours on Wednesday on boiler room captain training. The state party is recruiting poll watchers and lawyers to work the boiler rooms. This is going to be a nasty election. Please sign up if you are able
Link to tweet
https://www.texasdemocrats.org/vopro
jmbar2
(6,107 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(154,576 posts)I was part of the 3000 out of state attorneys who went to Florida in 2004 for Kerry Edwards. I have been working in war/boiler rooms every cycle since that election
jmbar2
(6,107 posts)The legal community nationwide are making such a huge contribution toward protecting Democracy. Thank you.
Here in Oregon, we have mail in voting, but apparently the Republicans are sending a big contingent to observe ballot processing, so I've volunteered to be a Democratic observer.
I hate that so many are trying to destroy democracy, with no better alternative.
northoftheborder
(7,608 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(154,576 posts)From Marc Elias' blog
Link to tweet
https://www.democracydocket.com/opinion/lawyers-can-make-the-difference-this-election/
Throughout that Election Day, hundreds of lawyers volunteered their time, working for hours to help voters. Some of the voting issues we encountered were simple and could be solved in minutes: What kind of IDs are valid? Can voters still register to vote on Election Day? How do voters prove their places of residence?
But sometimes we got more complicated and often nefarious questions. We saw voter intimidation, purposefully confusing election laws or even outright lies aimed at turning away voters from exercising their constitutional right to vote. We worked late into the night, fueled by caffeine and donuts, answering thousands of questions from voters until the polls closed.
I left that voter protection office late that night exhausted, but exhilarated. I had been part of a community of lawyers working on the front lines of the fight to ensure every person regardless of race, age, ZIP code or any other factor could make their voice heard at the polls.
But seeing how many challenges voters faced when trying to cast their ballots also gave me pause. It was clear that language barriers, information gaps and other systemic challenges still made voting too difficult for many, especially people from underrepresented communities.