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Now It's Clear Why Some People Are Scared of Early Voting: Because It Empowers People

Vote Today Ohio shows that you can bring marginalized people to vote early, and really challenge the powers that be.
 
 
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"I've thought of more excuses why not to vote, why not to do this," Bobby told us. "And each time, it has cost me more than it would have cost me to get up off my a** -- excuse my French -- and try to make a change."

So said Bobby Johnson in the back of one of our Vote Today Ohio shuttles. When he spotted our van at the Bishop Cosgrove Centre, a food pantry in Cleveland, he climbed right on in. He hadn't voted in years, but on October 4th, 2008, Bobby became one of the 67,408 Ohioans who cast a ballot during the first week of Ohio's new Early Voting period.

We have seen and heard Bobby's story repeated from Cincinnati to Youngstown, from Athens to Toledo. So many unlikely voters we drove to Ohio Early Voting Centers represent this truth: elections are changing. You might even say democracy itself, in fact, is changing. For the better.

Ohio no longer has an Election Day. Innovative updating of the process has now yielded an Election Month. And we've seen the embracing of this change in the faces of the very voters most positively impacted by it.

This year, an estimated 1 out of 3 Americans will cast their ballot either through absentee or early voting. Colorado is even expected to see half its turnout amongst early voters. Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner opened Early Voting Centers in every county on September 30 and will keep them open through November 3. She has gone openly and vehemently on the record as supporting Early Voting as a means of broadening access, and estimates that "25 percent of Ohio's registered voters, or the number of voters voting, will have voted before Election Day."

Um, so what?

Political operatives will need awhile to figure out just how Early Voting will alter the longstanding rules of campaigning. But everyone -- even armchair observers -- recognizes the impact early voters could have on overall election results. Consider that after all the counts were recounted, Bush took Ohio in 2004 by roughly 100,000 votes (and squeaked in Florida by a mere 527 votes). Campaigners on either side of the spectrum see the value of locking in those sorts of numbers within the early voting window. Every vote sizzles with relevance: the 3300 voters we (Vote Today Ohio) transported represent far more than a drop in the bucket. Of the 9264 people who this year voted during Golden Week in Franklin County (home to Columbus), we moved 1369 of them -- that's 14.8 percent of the early vote in Franklin County. It's safe to assume that hundreds of thousands of Ohioans have learned about early voting directly from our work. That's powerful.

After having spent the last four weeks helping Ohioans take advantage of the early voting scheme, we are even more convinced that early voting enhances democracy. It allows more people to vote -- plain and simple. Most Americans take voting seriously, but it's not like Election Day is a national holiday. Oh no -- voters are expected to tuck the task of ballot casting in between work and school and commuting and all the realities of modern life. Never mind the notorious polling center line-ups and moody machines that Ohioans know all too well, or GOP intimidation (the Huffington Post recently reported that Republicans intend to place 3,600 paid recruits inside Ohio polling places on Election Day to challenge the qualifications of certain voters).

Our vans have transported all manner of Ohioans -- of Bobby Johnsons -- who are unlikely to have voted otherwise. Nick drove an elderly Dayton man to vote early who figured his absentee ballot would be lost at the housing project where he lives. Caty drove Columbus college students who were too excited to wait until November 4. Erik drove a transient Cincinnati woman who for forty years, has abstained from elections, thinking her vote didn't matter. Rafiq has driven countless young Cleveland men who most people fear or overlook as part of the urban scenery.

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