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Anti-Voting Laws Dishonor Voting Anniversary

This week is the anniversary of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. But instead of marking progress, today we’re seeing legal challenges to this landmark law and new anti-voting laws that prevent eligible voters from voting.

If they can’t count on your vote, they want to keep you from being counted at all. Eligible voters should be able to vote.

Voting is a fundamental freedom — we need to protect our democracy by making sure all eligible voters can vote. Instead, state-by-state, Republican politicians are putting up hurdles that prevent law-abiding citizens from voting.

Anti-voting laws require photo ID that 20 million Americans don’t have, take away the flexibility that parents and workers need to vote early or on weekends, and block volunteers from helping others with their voter registration paperwork. These new anti-voting laws target people with the least time and money. But that’s not all: seniors and veterans whose existing ID used to be fine suddenly can’t vote either.

Politicians who can’t count on your vote want to keep you from being counted at all — no matter the consequences. They’re rigging the vote so the system stays rigged in their favor.

PERSONAL STORIES

To illustrate the impact of these new anti-voting laws on real people, here are stories you can use:


ATTACKS AND RESPONSES

FALSEHOOD: "The Obama campaign is trying to end early voting for our military in Ohio."
RESPONSE:

ATTACK: "Democrats are trying to steal elections by registering dogs and dead people in Virginia."
RESPONSE:


WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

These are some of the things that are more common than voter fraud: The number of Americans who have a favorable view of North Korea, exploding toilets, death by being crushed by furniture or television, being set on fire by doctors during surgery, and death from your nightwear igniting or melting.


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