The federalist

Conservatives create their own voter mobilization system in key states, tired of Democrats’ efforts


You’d be hard-pressed ‌to find a more⁤ energetic group of go-getters ​than the army of vote wranglers in the Students Learn Students Vote⁤ Coalition. SLSV, which bills itself ‍as the “national hub & largest nonpartisan network in the country dedicated to increasing student‌ voter participation,” is definitely dedicated.

But the coalition, which is at best⁤ “nonpartisan” in name only,⁣ is just‌ one of a litany‌ of leftist groups tirelessly and cooperatively working around the nation, particularly in the election-deciding battleground states, to ‍elect Democrats.

The mission-focused​ group is but one working ⁢example ⁢of why the​ left is a well-oiled machine in turning out votes, especially among⁣ younger voters. But⁣ conservatives are waking up and pushing ⁢back, using some of the same get-out-the-vote (GOTV)​ strategies and​ tactics that Democrats have so effectively employed to win.

SLSV’s monthly meeting in February featured Amanda Fuchs Miller, deputy assistant secretary in the Office of Postsecondary Education at the U.S. Department of Education (DOE). The bureaucrat gave the clubhouse gang a rundown of DOE’s legally suspect plan to use ‍federal work-study program funds to pay college students to register their peers and ⁤work at the polls.​ It’s⁢ all part of the Bidenbucks plan, the⁢ Biden ⁣administration’s sweeping get-out-the-vote campaign using federal agencies and liberal groups to target Democrat-leaning voters ahead of ⁤November’s presidential election.

Yet there was so much more to⁢ the coalition’s February Zoom call: a presentation on the output of SLSV’s bee-busy working groups, an update on upcoming⁢ Action Plan Workshops, and a detailed discussion of the group’s goals this election year‌ and beyond.

The meeting opened with a partner spotlight of Tevon⁣ Blair, co-founder of Xceleader. Blair is a “strategic communicator and social ‍equity advocate in the ⁤nonprofit​ and political sector,” according to his company website bio.

Groups like SLSV and Xceleader are in it to win it all year ‍round.

“Students enjoy that they know that every time a presidential election or governor’s race⁤ comes around, they know there’s going to be somebody on that campus trying to get them activated,” Blair told his leftist ‌allies on the Zoom call.

While SLSV’s foot soldiers may be mainly made up of fresh-faced, wide-eyed left-wing college students, the organization ‍and ⁣partner groups such as⁤ Xceleader ‍are directed by seasoned former ‌Democrat operatives tapped into a vast network of far-left money and resources.​

Blair worked on Democrat ‍Stacey Abrams’ failed Georgia gubernatorial campaign. That fact might suggest how he and his organization get young voters “activated.” SLSV’s co-founder and Executive Director Clarissa ‍Unger is a proud alumna of Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign.

“Being⁢ a part of the Obama 2008 campaign was an honor and a transformative experience. 15​ years later, I love that I still get to spend every day working to⁢ help students across the country⁢ have a voice in our elections. #ObamaAlumni #Obama08 #YesWeCan,” Unger wrote last November ​in response to Valerie Jarrett, President Obama’s former senior adviser and ⁤CEO of the Obama Foundation.

‘We Had to Do​ Something’

While it may​ seem the left is light years ahead of the right in driving voters to the polls (by hook or crook), conservative groups⁤ across​ the country have been working overtime ‌to catch up.

In ⁤battleground Michigan, where Biden won in 2020 amid myriad election ⁣administration “irregularities,”​ Michigan Fair ​Elections and Pure Integrity Michigan Elections (PIME) are ⁢more ​than election ⁤integrity watchdogs. As election security lioness Cleta Mitchell said⁣ on her podcast, Patrice Johnson, chairwoman of the nonprofit organizations, is doing all she can to ensure her state doesn’t “fall prey to the things that happened ‌in 2020.”

In the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election, Johnson and some of her fellow citizens “decided to take action to help restore election integrity in Michigan,” as PIME’s‍ website states.

“There were just‌ several of us sitting around a kitchen table⁤ after⁢ the‍ elections, and we were​ grousing and doubtful and skeptical and ‍very upset. And we decided this wasn’t going to do anything. We had to do ⁤something,” Johnson told Mitchell last year on the latter’s podcast, “Who’s Counting?

These frustrated Michiganders concluded, “If we’re going to focus on something, it had better be election integrity because⁣ without that we don’t have anything,” ‍Johnson said.

Among its long list of initiatives, PIME launched the Underserved Voter Outreach Team (UVOTE), charged with identifying segments of the voting population the left wants little to nothing to do with. They include people of​ faith,‌ gun owners, veterans, and others — constitutional patriots, a significant portion of whom have for various reasons sat out elections. Johnson said that often these would-be voters simply haven’t been approached.

“I ​think it’s very important to show ⁤them why, now more than ever, that‍ it’s important to stand up for the Constitution and their constitutional‍ rights and the quality of our elections,” Johnson said.⁣ “They’re good people, they’ve just been overlooked.”

The GOTV effort is a natural offshoot of the organization’s “Soles to the Rolls” program, which encourages its growing army of volunteers to use the Check My Vote website to‌ track potential problems in Michigan’s voter ⁣rolls. As my Federalist​ colleague Shawn Fleetwood reported, the free voting history database‌ was created in the wake of Michigan’s leading Democrat election official’s refusal to clean up the Great Lakes‍ State’s ⁣rolls.

Soles to⁤ the Rolls has been so galvanizing that it’s earned ⁣the expected disdain of The New York ⁣Times. The Democrat Party’s mouthpiece suspects the election integrity initiative is ⁤“an apparent play​ on Souls to the Polls,” the far-left-funded get-out-the-liberal-vote campaign in Wisconsin. It’s all just more⁤ “election-denial movement” stuff, according to the election integrity deniers at the Times.

Getting into the Harvest

In deep-blue California, Republicans are getting wise to ⁣one of⁣ the left’s more effective vote-capturing tools: ballot harvesting.

Conservatives‌ have rightly complained about the practice and ‍the⁢ election integrity holes in such ballot-collection initiatives​ by third-party groups.‍ But as CalMatters notes, the California Republican Party is “going big” on ⁢ballot harvesting in 2024. Reporter Sameea Kamal wrote in October:

In part, it’s ‍a reflection of political reality: With a few exceptions, the Republican Party has been struggling. On top of ‍Democratic majorities in the ⁤Legislature since 1996, no ​Republican has been elected statewide ‌office since 2006. And since the COVID-19 pandemic, California has sent ⁢mail ⁢ballots to ‍every registered voter, making it easier‌ for⁣ people to cast their ballots earlier and not just at polling places on Election Day.

California is‍ one of 33 states‍ that allow voters to authorize someone else to return their absentee ⁤ballot for them, with varying⁢ limitations, according to the National Conference ‍of State Legislatures. California ⁣ legalized the practice in 2016 but has since prohibited compensation based on the number ‌of vote-by-mail ballots returned. Flat-rate payment is​ allowed. The left-wing Golden State has also barred ballot dumps at places of employment.

Jessica Millan Patterson, chairwoman of⁤ the California GOP, did‍ not return The Federalist’s requests for comment. But she did tell CalMatters that the party‍ is playing by the rules they’ve been given.

“It doesn’t make any ⁤sense to only ​be Election Day voters. That is like only playing three ​quarters of a football game,” she said, countering conservative purists who⁤ don’t want ⁣anything to do with ballot harvesting.

‘That Can’t Happen Again’

Conservatives in the critical swing state of Arizona are finding other ways to beat ⁢Democrats at their own GOTV‍ game, said Scot Mussi, president of the Arizona Free Enterprise⁢ Club. Mussi⁢ said right-of-center Arizonans ⁤are assembling a “whole coalition of different organizations so we have⁣ a ground game and a get-out-the-vote operation that beats the intensity of the left.”

The effort begins with the Arizona Liberty Network, dedicated to helping citizens “effectively engage‍ on political, social, cultural and economic issues affecting” the state.​ Mussi said the ​ground‍ game initiative includes consistent and sustained Hispanic outreach.

Hispanics are projected to account for nearly 1 in 5 voters in Arizona in November’s elections, Cronkite News reported. Hispanic voters in the last midterm election continued to back Democrats ⁤over Republicans, but a⁤ higher rate of ‍Hispanic voters ⁤cast ballots for GOP candidates compared to the previous midterms, according to Pew Research. The gap dropped from 72 percent of Hispanics voting Democrat compared to 25 percent supporting Republicans in 2018 to 60 percent and 39 percent, respectively, in 2022.

“Our belief is that Hispanic voters are traditionally conservative on issues like crime, culture, schools for their kids, the⁤ economy, even on immigration,” ​Mussi‌ said, adding that these are the issues that conservative groups are talking about with Hispanic ⁤voters.

The data bear out the fact that Hispanics are not some monolithic voting bloc, and their ⁢votes cannot be taken ⁢for granted. That’s particularly true among younger Hispanics. ‍

Arizona Corporation Commissioner ​Lea Márquez Peterson told ​Cronkite News that she started Hispanic Leadership PAC, a political action committee that supports Hispanic Republicans ​who run for office.

“My parents are Democrats, my brother and I are Republican. ⁣I ⁢mean, so we’ve seen a lot of shifting and changing and‌ it really depends‍ on the perspective people are looking towards,” Márquez Peterson told the publication.

But‍ Mussi said the commitment to GOTV efforts has to be year-round, and conservative ground-game leaders are finally waking up to that fact. He said failing to get conservative⁤ voters engaged and effectively communicate what’s at stake will keep Joe Biden and his disastrous regime in power for another four years, with a majority in Congress to do the far-left’s will.

“When we reviewed 2022, we found we experienced a drop​ off in Republican voting performance. That can’t happen again,” the conservative leader​ said. “We need to make​ sure conservatives‍ and independent voters believe that Biden has led us in a wrong direction and make sure they are showing up.”


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How does ‌the SLSV Coalition’s nonpartisan claim align with their efforts to elect Democrats?

Title: The Battle for Votes: Conservatives Catching Up to ⁤Leftist GOTV Efforts

Introduction:

In recent​ years, leftist groups have shown remarkable success in​ mobilizing voters and⁢ driving turnout during elections. One such ‍example ​is the ⁢Students Learn Students Vote (SLSV)‌ Coalition, a nonpartisan network​ dedicated to increasing student voter participation. However, critics argue that these groups are primarily working towards electing Democrats. While it may seem like the left​ has a significant‌ advantage in voter turnout, conservative groups across the United⁢ States have been actively working to catch up and employ similar​ strategies. This article examines the efforts of these conservative groups in battleground states, including Michigan, California, and Arizona, to counter the left’s successful get-out-the-vote (GOTV) campaigns.

SLSV:⁤ Nonpartisan⁤ in ​Name Only:

Though the SLSV Coalition bills itself as nonpartisan, it is just one among numerous leftist⁤ groups tirelessly working to elect Democrats. The coalition⁣ is part⁢ of the larger well-oiled machine on the left that effectively turns⁣ out votes, especially among younger voters. Conservatives are now waking up to⁤ these⁤ efforts⁤ and using similar GOTV strategies to level the playing field.

Conservative Response in Michigan:

Michigan Fair Elections and Pure Integrity Michigan Elections (PIME) are conservative groups dedicated ‌to election integrity. They have taken action to restore confidence in the state’s election processes, particularly in ‌response to alleged⁣ irregularities in the 2020 presidential election. PIME’s Underserved Voter Outreach Team⁢ (UVOTE) focuses⁢ on engaging segments of⁣ the population often overlooked by the left, such as⁢ people of​ faith, gun owners, veterans, and constitutional patriots. Their efforts aim to ensure that ‌all citizens exercise their ⁢rights and participate in elections.

Conservative Engagement in California:

Recognizing the predominance of Democrats in California politics since ⁤1996, the Republican Party⁣ has‍ embraced ballot harvesting, a practice that has traditionally been associated with the left. By participating in ‌ballot collection initiatives, conservatives aim to increase their influence ​in the state’s ‍elections and counterbalance ⁢the ease of ⁤voting by mail. Jessica Millan Patterson, chairwoman of the California GOP, stresses the importance of engaging in these practices to ensure fair representation.

Conservative Mobilization in‍ Arizona:

Conservatives in Arizona, a crucial swing state, are actively building a coalition of organizations to create an effective ground game‌ and GOTV operation. The Arizona Liberty Network leads efforts to engage ⁤citizens ⁣on political, social,⁢ cultural, and economic issues that affect the state. Recognizing the⁣ growing Hispanic voter population in Arizona, ​conservatives‍ have ​launched Hispanic outreach initiatives to connect with this traditionally conservative demographic.

Conclusion:

Conservative groups across the ⁤United States⁣ are stepping up their ​efforts to match the left’s successful get-out-the-vote campaigns. By adopting similar strategies and engaging overlooked voter⁤ segments, conservatives hope to increase their influence and ensure fair representation. The battle for ⁢votes continues to evolve, and conservatives are determined to​ catch‍ up and compete on an equal footing with their counterparts on the left.



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