Anonymous ID: 16fb69 Sept. 21, 2024, 5:40 p.m. No.21636633   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6677 >>6860 >>6943

Voter registration is spiking, particularly among young adults

(This story was updated because an earlier version included an inaccuracy.)

 

Voter registration is breaking records as Election Day approaches, particularly among young people, many of whom are first-time voters.

 

On Tuesday's National Voter Registration Day more than 150,000 people registered through Vote.org, the most the organization has ever seen on that day. The organization registered 279,400 voters in all of last year.

 

Last week, 337,826 people visited a link posted on Instagram by pop star Taylor Swift that directed them to their state's voter registration site.

 

Although Swift noted that she would be voting for the Democratic candidate, Vice President Kamala Harris, people don't have to declare a party affiliation when they register and neither vote.org nor Swift tracked registrations by party. Vote.org has previously told USA TODAY that about 80% of people they register turn out in the next election.

 

Sign-up for Your Vote: Text with the USA TODAY elections team.

 

Jon Luke Young, manager for the Get Out the Vote department of the New Georgia Project, speaks with canvassers to encourage people to register to vote in Atlanta, Georgia on May 12, 2022.

A huge percentage of the newly registered voters are young people, many voting for the first time.

 

According to Vote.org, voters under 35 made up 81% of Tuesday's registrations, with the biggest spike among 18-year-olds. On this year's National Voter Registration Day, 11% of those registered were 18, which is 53% higher than on the same day four years ago.

 

"We're really seeing a surge in 18-year-olds registering to vote." Vote.org CEO Andrea Hailey said. "We know that we can onboard the next generation of voters into our democracy if we can get people to register and get out to these elections."

 

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat, is also trying to make it easier for people to register to vote.

 

After years of lobbying, she announced Friday that those filing out applications for health insurance through the HealthCare.Gov website would be offered an option to receive information on voter registration.

 

“The health of our democracy depends on Americans registering and exercising their right to vote," Warren said in a statement. Many people looking for coverage through the website have low-wage jobs that don't offer insurance or are just coming off of their parents' insurance at age 26.

 

"I’ve pushed for the government to use every tool to make it easier to register, particularly for younger and lower-income individuals, and this update is an important action by the Biden-Harris administration to protect the right to vote for all Americans,” Warren said.

 

Others are finding creative ways to register young voters, including Ezra Gershanok, whose New York City apartment subletting company, Ohana, is reaching younger people in a way that catches their attention: funny memes.

 

He and others at the company have been passing out flyers with election-related jokes and a QR code that leads to a voter registration site.

 

His hope, he said, is to get young people new to the region ‒ precisely his company's demographic ‒ to register to vote. "This past month, our website traffic hit 40,000 people per month, and a lot of them are these young people that are fresh out of college taking their first job in New York, or in this demographic of folks that don't often register to vote," he said. "So we were like, 'could we make an impact in this election by just getting our own users to register to vote?'"

 

They hit 445 registrations this week and hope to register 10,000 young people by election day.

 

"I don't think this would resonate with people in their 40s or 50s, but it definitely resonates with young people," Gershanok said.

 

To register to vote, go to Vote.gov, vote.org, or your state or local election offices.

They won't tell most of them are gonna vote for Trump

 

(https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2024/09/21/young-voter-registration-breaking-records-swift/75306021007/

Anonymous ID: 16fb69 Sept. 21, 2024, 5:44 p.m. No.21636655   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6677 >>6860 >>6943

==RFK Jr. To Appeal Decision Letting Michigan Keep Him On Ballot

Logan Washburn==

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said today he will appeal a federal court’s decision allowing Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, to keep him on the ballot despite his withdrawal from the presidential race.

 

Judge Denise Hood, of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, denied Kennedy’s attempt Wednesday to keep Benson from adding him to the ballot. According to The Detroit News, Kennedy notified Hood today that he would be appealing the ruling to the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals.

 

Kennedy announced last month he would drop out of the race, withdrawing his name from the ballot in swing states like Michigan in hopes of helping former President Donald Trump defeat Vice President Kamala Harris.

 

But Benson refused to take Kennedy off the ballot, citing concerns that the Natural Law Party — with which Kennedy was running — could not nominate another candidate before November, as The Federalist previously reported. Since then, Kennedy and Benson have been battling in court. Similar obstacles to Kennedy’s withdrawal have cropped up in other states.

 

“The harm incurred by Defendant, the Natural Law Party, and Michigan voters outweighs that felt by Plaintiff if he is prohibited from withdrawing,” Hood wrote in the latest ruling. “Plaintiff’s motion is denied.”

 

Michigan is approaching election deadlines. According to the Detroit Free Press, county clerks must deliver absentee ballots to local clerks by Saturday, and “absentee ballots must be available to the general public by next Thursday.”

 

The Ruling

 

Kennedy asked the federal court for a preliminary injunction to keep Benson from “improperly and illegally” placing his name on the ballot, according to the ruling. He claimed violations of the Constitution’s Article 2, Section 1 — which covers the selection of the president — the First Amendment’s guarantee of free speech, and the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause.

 

Hood ruled against Kennedy, saying he was “not likely to succeed on the merits of this case.” Benson claimed Kennedy delayed raising his concerns, making her “unable to meet statutory deadlines for providing ballots to the county clerks.”

 

But Kennedy argued that “printing and mailing ballots with Mr. Kennedy’s name appearing as a candidate for an office he no longer seeks cancels his statutory and constitutional rights,” adding that “his supporters will be left confused and potentially angry should they later learn that a vote cast for Mr. Kennedy in Michigan was an invalid, wasted vote,” according to the ruling.

 

Hood dismissed these arguments, saying Kennedy “has not established a likelihood of irreparable harm.”

 

“Plaintiff’s only stated harm is to his reputation,” Hood ruled. “Reprinting ballots at this late hour would undoubtedly halt the voting process in Michigan and cause a burden to election officials. The Natural Law Party will also face harm.”

 

Legal Battles

 

When Kennedy’s campaign asked to take his name off the ballot, the Natural Law Party contacted the state director of elections, as The Federalist previously reported. The party opposed Kennedy’s request, saying this would leave the party without a nominee before November’s election.

 

So Benson said she would keep Kennedy’s name on the ballot over his objections. Her office claimed “minor party candidates cannot withdraw” and cited the Natural Law Party’s concerns.

 

Democrat election officials in other states posed similar obstacles to Kennedy’s removal from the ballot, where his absence might open more voters for Trump and hurt Vice President Kamala Harris’ chances at victory.

 

Kennedy filed a complaint in the court of claims on Aug. 30. The court denied Kennedy’s request, so he escalated his case to the court of appeals.

 

The court of appeals found Kennedy had a “clear legal right to have his name removed from the ballot,” according to its order. At that point, The Federalist’s Margot Cleveland spoke with Kennedy’s lawyer, who said Benson had already certified the list of candidates in every county without Kennedy’s name.

 

But the case went to the Michigan Supreme Court, which ruled that “statutory ambiguity makes it impossible to conclude that defendant had a clear legal duty to remove plaintiff from the ballot.” So it allowed Benson to add Kennedy’s name back to the ballot.

 

https://thefederalist.com/2024/09/20/rfk-jr-to-appeal-decision-letting-michigans-secretary-of-state-keep-him-on-the-ballot/