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October 2022

Check your voting status, make a plan before Election Day, Tuesday, Nov. 8

 

Color Of Change contributor report

In 2020, pro-democracy activists and local organizers helped make voting more accessible to a wider range of people —  including expanding early voting as well as creating options for mail-in voting and neighborhood ballot drop boxes. 

The result: Increased voter turnout, Democratic control of both houses of Congress and President Joe Biden, a Democrat, in the White House.

Despite those gains, Ernie Britt is keeping a close eye on the upcoming midterm elections. That’s because of a sharp GOP backlash to expanded voting rights that helped Black communities  — and former President Donald Trump’s ongoing campaign pushing the lie that the 2020 election was stolen.

“I’m concerned about Republican efforts to restrict access for Black voters — removing ballot drop boxes from our communities, threatening vote-by-mail programs, changing who counts our votes, and increasing criminal penalties for statistically insignificant, mostly imaginary ‘voting irregularities,’ ” said Britt, a campaign director for Color Of Change, the nation’s largest online racial justice organization.

That’s why Britt and others want Black voters to check their registration status, bone up on new voting laws in their state, find their polling places and make a plan to vote ahead of Election Day, Tuesday, Nov. 8.   

Color Of Change has an online voter engagement tool that can help people find out where and how to vote in the midterm elections. It also includes information about issues and candidates in key state and congressional races, helping voters make informed decisions.

The Brennan Center for Justice, a nonpartisan law and policy institute, also has an updated roundup of new state elections laws passed in 2021-22. 

Experts say attempts to suppress the Black vote are as old as the nation, ranging from poll taxes and literacy tests to violence against Black people who registered or tried to vote.

A cornerstone of the modern Civil Rights Movement, protections for Black voting rights became law with the Voting Rights Act of 1965. But a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 2013 allowed states with a history of suppressing the Black vote to change election laws largely without federal oversight — even if it directly harms Black voters. 

During the last two years, 21 states have approved laws making voting more difficult, according to the Brennan Center. During the same time, the center says, seven states have passed laws that open the door to partisan interference or threats to “the people and processes that make elections work.” 

Meanwhile, far-right activists and election deniers are running for local offices that oversee elections as well as volunteering to serve as “poll watchers” to aggressively find evidence that would confirms their theories about rigged elections.

Britt said the backlash shows conservative politicians and their allies clearly fear the power of the Black vote. 

Black voters helped resurrect Biden’s sagging campaign during the Democratic presidential primaries in early 2020. The same year, Black voters powered Democrats’ U.S. Senate candidates to victory in key states like Georgia and Michigan, giving them a razor-thin majority.  

“Republican elected officials are already working overtime to undo our progress,” Britt said. “They’re doubling down because our votes are powerful. Increased voter turnout can move the needle. Just look at Georgia,” which made Sen.. Rafael Warnock the first  Black senator in the state’s history. 

“The trend is clear — the demographics in these states are becoming less white and more politically engaged, threatening the GOP’s power,” said Britt. “But strong federal action is needed to protect our freedom to vote this cycle and beyond.”

Adisa Muse, a former political campaign organizer based in Virginia, said Black people need to be vigilant to protect their voting rights. 

“It only took a generation to take voting for granted,” Muse said. “My parents had to remind me that, when they went to college, they had protests to ensure that everyone could vote,” but the tradition of involvement seems to be declining in younger generations.

“If you exercise your franchise vigorously and consistently, it becomes harder to take away.”

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