FAQ

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Voter suppression is a strategy used to influence the outcome of an election by discouraging or preventing specific groups of people from voting. 

In the last decade, there has been a steady erosion of voting rights—and in 2021, the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was all but dismantled. In the 2022 legislative session alone, 39 states introduced at least 393 restrictive voting laws and many of those laws passed. Since then, some candidates have openly run on a platform of attacking elections.

We can’t out-organize all voter suppression, but there are lots of things that organizing can counter, including stricter voter ID requirements, voter roll purges, attacks on early voting, and attempts to make voter registration harder.

In most U.S. elections, you either need to vote in-person at an official polling place or by casting an absentee or mail-in ballot. To know your options, visit vote.org

Sometimes circumstances make it hard or impossible for you to vote on Election Day. But most states let you vote in person during a designated early voting period.

Absentee voting allows you to vote before Election Day by mail or drop box. Although every state has absentee voting, rules on who can take part vary.

Your polling place is where you go to vote on Election Day. Find out where yours is located, its hours, and if you can change your polling place.

Most states do not require you to bring your voter registration card to the polls. But a majority of states do expect you to provide another form of ID to vote in person.

Most states do not require you to bring your voter registration card to the polls. But a majority of states do expect you to provide another form of ID to vote in person.