Posted on September 19, 2024
Buckle up and knuckle down: How you can dive into the presidential campaign and help your candidate win
The upcoming presidential election will be the most consequential in U.S. history. It will decide the direction of our country for, well, forever.
With so much at stake, the two parties are highly energized. Backers of both sides are registering to vote, sending campaign contributions and volunteering to make calls or knock on doors for their candidates.
So what can you do?
You can vote, obviously. But you can do a lot more than that before Election Day. You can talk to your friends and neighbors about their concerns and how your favored candidate addresses them. You can make a sign and join a protest. You can host a potluck—and hope it doesn’t turn into a food fight.
Or you can go deeper and volunteer for your candidate’s local campaign. If you have a specific skill, the campaign can probably use it, whether it’s organizing events or writing press releases or making short videos.
If you’re not already registered to vote, you can do that. Not sure if you’re registered? You can check at Vote.org, which is a comprehensive online platform where you can verify your registration, register to vote, request a mail-in ballot, sign up for election reminders and find your polling location.
A lot of people going to the polls in November will face new, stricter voting laws passed since the last presidential election, including voter ID laws that make it harder, more confusing and more costly for citizens to vote. Thirty-eight states will have voter ID laws in place for the 2024 election. If you’re concerned, check with VoteRiders, which is focused exclusively on helping voters overcome the confusing, time-consuming and expensive barriers created by ID laws.
If you’re a Black voter, consider engaging with Black Voters Matter, a group dedicated to turning out voters and increasing power in marginalized, predominantly Black communities. Black Voters Matter has a vibrant volunteer effort that includes texting, postcard writing, organizing and fundraising.
All three of the above nonprofits are CREDO Mobile partners and have received much-needed funding from our donations program, which every year supports dozens of nonprofit groups fighting for progressive causes.
Resources for young voters
If you’re young, there are a number of organizations that will help you get involved in the election. For high-schoolers, the nonpartisan nonprofit New Voters will provide you with a personal mentor to guide you through the process. The Civics Center offers a 1-hour instructional webinar and a Democracy in a Box toolkit that includes all you need to build a voter-registration drive.
Another great nonpartisan nonprofit aimed at young people is Rock the Vote. Go to the site and you can register online. It has voting information for every state, as well as a how-to guide if you want to organize a voter-registration drive. It regularly posts election information to its social media accounts that you can share on your own accounts.
Perhaps most powerfully, you can be a poll worker and play a critical role in the election’s success by ensuring that all voters get the assistance they need when they go to their polling place. As a poll worker, you may help set up the polling location, welcome voters as they arrive, verify their registration or hand out ballots. You’ll answer questions, explain the voting procedure and show voters how ballot machines work. Learn more at the United States Election Assistance Commission.
A way you can vote every day
Every purchase you make is, in its way, a vote. It’s a choice that expresses your personal and, often, your political values. If you buy fast fashion, you are, in a small but important way, supporting sweatshop labor, severe environmental pollution and 10% of global CO2 emissions.
If you buy from Amazon, you are, in a small but important way, supporting a company that spies on labor and environmental groups, exploits workers and produces enough plastic waste each year to wrap the planet in 800 layers, in spite of the fact that Amazon “would have no problem” switching to plastic-free packaging, says former Amazon executive Rachel Johnson Greer.
Obviously, companies aren’t political candidates. But they do have an immense impact on our economy, society and environment. And when you spend with them, you vote for them.
Here’s a better idea. Do business with companies that share your values. Shop at local stores instead of Amazon. Buy sustainable clothes instead of sweatshop fast-fashion.
And switch to CREDO Mobile, the phone company that’s as committed to progressive causes as you are. You’ll get all you need from your mobile service: the nation’s top-rated network, competitive plans and great deals on new devices. And you’ll get much more: a powerful way to support your values whenever you use your phone.
To date, we’ve donated over $95 million to nonprofit groups working hard for causes like climate action, reproductive freedom and protecting Social Security. Our passion is not dollars, it’s change. And we fight every day to make it happen. Join us.