Tuesday Tip: How to register to vote — or find out if you’re already registered

Tuesday Tip: How to register to vote — or find out if you’re already registered

Voting is one of the most important acts we can perform in our democracy, especially as Republicans relentlessly try to suppress the vote in order to steal elections and advance their dangerous, racist agenda.

November’s midterm elections will be a massive opportunity to reject Republican extremism and stand up for progressive values.  Voters will determine who controls the House and Senate, as well as 36 state governorships and multiple state legislatures.

If Democrats flip control of one or both houses of Congress and statehouses across the country, they could block Trump’s agenda, slam the door on Trump’s nominees, block Republican gerrymandering in the 2021 redrawing of congressional districts, and gain new powers to investigate the Trump administration.

It is exactly because of moments like these that Republicans have been trying for decades to suppress the vote of people of color, the elderly, low-income people, and people living in progressive or urban areas with their racist, classist and ageist voter suppression laws.

Don’t fall into their traps. Register to vote. It’s your right, your privilege, and your duty.  Here’s how.

Make sure you’re eligible

You’re eligible to vote if:

  • You’re a U.S. citizen.
  • You’re a legal resident of your state.
  • You’re 18 years old. Some states allow 17-year-olds to register if they’ll be 18 before election day.
  • Some states shamefully prevent people with prior felony convictions or who are incarcerated from voting. Find out the laws in your state from the ACLU.

Find out if you’re registered already

This takes about 30 seconds. Fill out the form at Vote.org and click “Check your registration.”

Register online

If you’re not registered now, you can easily register online in 38 states plus the District of Columbia: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

If you’re a resident of one of these states, you can register in 2 minutes at Vote.gov.

Register by mail

Download the National Mail Voter Registration Form. You can fill it out on screen and print the completed form or you can print the blank form and fill it out by hand. Sign the form and mail it to the address listed for your state.

In addition to English, the form is available in Bengali, Chinese, Hindi, Japanese, Khmer, Korean, Spanish, Tagalog and Vietnamese.

Register in person

You can register in person at your state or local election office. Find it here. You can also register at your local DMV office when you apply for or renew a driver’s license.

Twelve states and the District of Columbia automatically register you to vote when you apply for or renew a license unless you opt out. Those states are: Alaska, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and West Virginia.

You can also register at your local armed services recruitment center. And at state and county public assistance offices that provide food stamps/SNAP, the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children, and services for the disabled. There you can fill out and submit a National Mail Voter Registration Form.

Register on time

Every state has a voter registration deadline, which you must meet in order to vote in the next election. The deadline is usually two to four weeks prior to the election. Check your state’s deadline at the U.S. Vote Foundation.

Register on election day

Sixteen states plus the District of Columbia allow you to register on the day of an election: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, Utah, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.

A lot of people are taking advantage of this option. In 2016, states that allow election day registration had an average of 7% higher turnout compared to states that did not.

Update your registration information

You can check and possibly change your registration information—including your name, address and political party—online at Can I Vote, a nonpartisan website created by state election officials to help eligible voters figure out how and where to vote.

You should re-register or update your information if you’ve changed your name, moved permanently or if you’re voting in a new location after changing your registration address.

A good source for more information on registration and for registration shortcuts is Vote.org, a site created to simplify political engagement, increase voter turnout and strengthen our democracy.

We’ll see you at the polls!

VIDEO: CREDO activists make national news at DHS secretary immigration protest


CREDO activists made national headlines and blanketed cable news when we organized a flash protest at the home of DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, the senior official implementing Trump’s cruel and inhumane immigration policies, including separating families at the border.

Watch the highlight video below, or click here to watch on our YouTube channel.

What is environmental and climate justice?

What is environmental and climate justice?

When some people think of environmentalism or climate change, they might envision protecting endangered species, melting ice caps, rising sea levels, and a warming planet.

These are all critically important aspects in the fight to protect our planet, but here at CREDO, we go a few steps further.

Instead of just considering the effects on the physical environment, we understand that a changing climate has a disproportionate impact on communities of color, low-income people and other marginalized communities here in the United States and across the world.

Because climate change causes drought, extreme weather, and flooding that can lead to famine, forced migration and even armed conflict, the first communities to feel the effects of a changing climate are the world’s most vulnerable.

Here in the United States, communities of color and low-income communities are also the hardest hit by climate change and the fossil fuel industry’s relentless exploitation of natural resources.

Take, for example, recent hurricanes in the Gulf, whose strengths were intensified by a changing climate, that destroyed homes and displaced tens of thousands of low-income people and people of color. Or the toxic coal, oil and gas plants and infrastructure projects that pollute our air and water and cause disproportionate adverse health effects on vulnerable communities.

That’s why our activism to slow climate change and protect the environment always considers the racial and economic impact on marginalized communities. And it’s why we’ve donated more than $19 million to progressive organizations fighting for climate justice.

If you’d like to learn more about our climate justice activism and take action, please visit credoaction.com.

Join CREDO in the Rise for Climate, Jobs, and Justice march on September 8. Learn more.

An update on some of the amazing work CREDO members are helping to fund

Since our founding, CREDO has supported progressive nonprofits on the frontlines of the most important fights for civil rights, climate justice, equality and more. The donations we make to these organizations wouldn’t be possible without our members. And that’s why we want to share with you what our recent grantees have accomplished with their CREDO funding. You helped make the following possible:

National Domestic Workers Alliance’s recent $52,684 CREDO grant helped the organization become an anchor in the Families Belong Together coalition that formed in response to the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” immigration policies. The organization led a grassroots campaign to demand the end of family separation and detention and called for the reunification of the over 2,300 children who were separated from their parents this spring. To learn more, visit domesticworkers.org.

Since Amnesty International received its recent $60,190 CREDO grant, the organization launched a variety of campaigns to support its work to demand human rights for all people, including Troll Patrol, a global effort to stop abuse against women on Twitter through direct advocacy and using thousands of digital volunteers to track and report abuse. To learn more, visit amnestyusa.org.

Earthjustice used its recent $63,724 CREDO grant to continue fighting Trump’s efforts to roll back critical environmental and public health protections. The organization’s work included filing and winning lawsuits around safe pesticide handling in California and the EPA’s failure to protect civil rights in the environmental context. It also prevented an enormous coal export terminal from getting shoreline permits in Washington. To learn more, visit earthjustice.org.

350.org’s recent $66,141 grant supported new climate action projects across the globe, including “Fossil Free,” which encourages and supports 350’s network of volunteers to start new local campaigns to push city governments and other institutions to stop and ban the development of any new fossil fuel projects and commit to a just transition to 100 percent renewable energy. To learn more, visit 350.org.

These efforts by our partners were made possible in part by the CREDO members who use our products and services everyday. Learn more about CREDO Mobile, the carrier with a conscience.

Victory: CREDO helps stop Sinclair-Tribune mega-merger

Amazing news: Thanks to the activism by more than 200,000 CREDO activists and our partners, we stopped the Sinclair-Tribune media mega-merger from moving forward.

This merger would have given a single broadcast company a disturbing level of influence in the country’s media landscape. Already Sinclair is the largest broadcast group in the country, with 193 local stations. Sinclair has a long history of force-feeding local stations racist and biased must-run segments that hurt local journalism and communities.

The proposed mega-merger would have left Sinclair with an incredible 223 stations covering 72 percent of U.S. households.

Because of our massive grassroots pressure, even Trump’s FCC had to acknowledge that this deal was bad for the public interest.

This victory was all possible in part because of CREDO members and activists who proudly stand up for our media and democracy – so from all of us here at CREDO, we’d like to say thank you for all that you do.

Tuesday Tip: How Mobile Payment Works

Tuesday Tip: How mobile payment works

Two years of your life. If you’re an average American, that’s the amount of time you’ll spend waiting in line.

Some of it can’t be helped. Like airport security. But some of it is uncalled for and annoying. Like when that person in front of you at the cafe takes 5 minutes to pay for a $3 latte with a credit card to get—what?—a few feet’s worth of airline miles? Aaargh!

Luckily, help is at hand. Mobile payment options speed transactions and shorten lines—and they’re increasingly popular. By the end of 2018, one-quarter of U.S. smartphone users over the age of 14 will have made a mobile payment in a store.

Here’s what you need to know to get started.

What are mobile payments?

A mobile payment means just that: making a payment with your mobile device. The payment can be at a restaurant, grocery store or any other store that accepts mobile payments.

Or it can be person to person, such as paying back a friend who spotted you for dinner or paying an eBay seller for a pair of shoes. Because they happen over the internet, payments can be done anywhere. Just open the app on your phone and tap a few times to send money. The payment may be made with your bank account, debit card or credit card. Popular P2P payment apps include Venmo, Zelle, and PayPal. Paying via your bank account or debit card is usually free while using a credit card will incur a small fee.

What is a mobile wallet?

This is an app on your phone that stores the information from your credit or debit card and enables you to make purchases with your phone, without having the actual card with you. The big three mobile wallets are Apple Pay, Google Pay, and Samsung Pay, which come integrated on their respective devices. iPhones have Apple Pay, Android phones have Google Pay and Samsung phones have Samsung Pay.

You can also download a mobile wallet app from your bank or credit card company. If you have a card from, say, Chase, or Capital One, you can download their wallet app to your device and use it wherever it’s accepted.

Mobile wallets make purchases quick and easy. When you arrive at the register, just open the wallet app, hold your phone up to the compatible reader and you’ve paid. Mobile wallets can also be downloaded to tablets and smartwatches.

What is a merchant wallet?

Megachains like Starbucks, Dunkin’ Donuts and Walmart offer their own “closed loop” payment apps that work only in their stores. For example, you can download the Starbucks wallet app (now the most popular mobile payment app in the world), put money in it, then use it to pay for your coffee.

These merchant apps are particularly popular because they give users rewards, like one free coffee after you buy 100. (If you do go to Starbucks, we encourage you to bring your own mug, since Starbucks paper cups still are not recyclable—although we did recently pressure Starbucks to begin development of a recyclable cup.)

Can you earn credit card rewards with a payment app?

The short answer is yes. The long answer is sometimes not. Yes, if your credit card gives you points, miles or cash back on your purchases, you’ll still earn those rewards if you use that credit card via a mobile payment app, same as you would if you used the plastic card.

But if your credit card gives you bonus rewards when you use it in specific places, like, say, 3% cash back when you use it at a restaurant, your mobile wallet may not categorize the payment exactly and you may not earn those bonus rewards, so check with your card issuer to be sure.

Some mobile wallets offer you their own rewards for using them. For example, Samsung Pay gives you rewards points you can use when you buy Samsung products, in addition to the rewards you get from your credit card company.

Is a mobile wallet secure?

Security is a primary reason more people have not embraced mobile payments. Many fear that when they transmit their credit card information into the atmosphere, some hacker might vacuum it up and go on a spending spree.

In fact, a mobile wallet is among the safest ways to pay. Think about it. When you write a check, a fraudster can easily steal all the private information that’s printed on the front of it: your name, address, bank, account number and routing number. They just take out their phone, snap a photo and it’s theirs.

And when you use a physical credit or debit card, the data can be stolen by a skimmer at an ATM, gas station or restaurant.

Payment apps and mobile wallets, on the other hand, create a random, one-time number—a transaction token—for every transaction. Even if someone is able to learn that number, it’s not valid for other transactions. Although you load your card information into your payment app, your card number is not shared with the merchant when you pay. Many payment apps also require a PIN or your fingerprint to authorize payments, so the app can’t be used by someone else even if your phone is stolen.

One other benefit of mobile payments: if more people don’t use credit and debit cards, that’s less plastic pollution fouling up our planet. Here’s another way you can help fight the plastic problem: try these alternatives to a plastic water bottle.

 

Transgender people’s rights and lives are under threat. Transgender Law Center is fighting back.


We are in a moment of intense violence and hatred, and there is a lot of fear in transgender and gender nonconforming communities. The number of transgender women of color murdered continues horrifically to rise. We are criminalized and arrested at alarming rates, while Trump and his bigoted Attorney General Jeff Sessions pledge to put transgender people in prison in unsafe and abusive conditions by denying us housing that corresponds to our gender identities.

Transgender women are fleeing deadly violence across the globe and seeking asylum in the United States, only to be held in inhumane detention conditions that can quite literally kill them. Roxsana Hernandez, one such woman who undertook a brutal journey this spring in the hope of finding safety in the United States, died in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody shortly after presenting herself at the border. If Trump succeeds in adding another conservative extremist to the Supreme Court, its radical majority that will likely target the rights and safety of transgender people for decades to come.

But it’s important to remember that when Transgender Law Center was founded 16 years ago, the rights and visibility we have today were not even in sight. Before all of our legal and policy wins, we took care of each other and we fought for our rights and for justice.  As a trans-led organization with a strong legal arm, we know that while the legal system can be used to provide relief for injustice, it was built to maintain unjust systems of power and marginalize our communities.

That’s why Transgender Law Center has long held that we must resist not only through courts and legislatures, but through rallying together, organizing and supporting each other as we have always done. Through programs like the Black LGBTQ Migrant Project, TRUTH, TIDE and Positively Trans, TLC continues to center those of us who are most targeted, including trans folks who are Muslim, Black, living with HIV, young, undocumented, and who have disabilities. And of course we continue to fight fiercely in the courts as we work on the ground to build up a trans-led movement for justice.

Trans and gender nonconforming people are resilient. We know how to fight for ourselves, our families, and our communities, and we know how to keep each other safe. TLC is drawing on that history and that strength as we continue doing what it takes to keep transgender and gender nonconforming people alive, thriving, and fighting for liberation.

Kris Hayashi is the executive director of the Transgender Law Center, an organization committed to keeping transgender people alive, thriving and fighting for liberation. This past June, CREDO members voted to donate over $34,000 to the organization. 

CREDO reaches $86 million in donations to progressive groups


We’ve got some really exciting news to share: CREDO has recently surpassed the milestone of having donated $86 million to progressive groups since we opened our doors in 1985!

That’s $86 million in donations to organizations like the ACLU, United We Dream, Planned Parenthood and so many more that are fighting for civil rights, climate justice and the environment, peace, women’s rights and other progressive causes.

This achievement is only possible because of the loyalty of CREDO members who use our products every day. From our mobile phones and long distance to our credit cards and now our new energy product – our members are fueling the progressive movement in incredible ways.

So if you’re a current CREDO member, we’d like to say thank you. If you’re interested in joining our progressive movement, click here to learn more about the products that fund it: CREDO Mobile and CREDO Energy.

Again, thank you for believing in our vision of creating positive social change every day. Here’s to $87 million – and beyond!

Vote to give funding to these three progressive groups this August

Every month, we ask you – our members – to vote how we distribute our monthly donation to three great progressive groups. This month, you have the chance to vote for groups fighting Trump’s Supreme Court takeover, protecting Social Security and Medicare and standing up for women’s rights by casting your ballot for Alliance for Justice Action Campaign, Social Security Works and UltraViolet.

Alliance for Justice Action Campaign
We can’t allow Donald Trump to give a lifetime seat on the Supreme Court to another person who will march in lockstep with his agenda. That’s why the Alliance for Justice Action Campaign is organizing massive resistance to protect the Supreme Court from a total Trump takeover.

CREDO funding will allow AFJAC to create a dynamic digital awareness campaign aimed at stopping Donald Trump from packing our courts with right-wing extremists for lifetime judicial appointments. AFJAC will mobilize activists and make senators’ inboxes light up with powerful messages regarding preserving key civil rights and protections

Social Security Works
Social Security Works fights to protect and improve the economic security of disadvantaged and at-risk populations, safeguards the economic security of those dependent, now or in the future, on Social Security and maintains Social Security as a vehicle of social justice.

As Trump and congressional Republicans continue their attacks on our earned benefit programs, funding from CREDO members is now more vital than ever to ensure Social Security Works can continue its fight to expand Social Security, enact Medicare for All and lower drug prices.

UltraViolet
UltraViolet promotes a more equitable world for all women and creates consequences for sexism. It leverages high profile media moments to hold decision makers accountable, creates a cost for sexism, and shines a light on the people and policies that are improving all women’s lives.

CREDO funding will help UltraViolet educate and empower women and allies to lead strategic, mediagenic actions online and in their communities that highlight the interconnected injustices that women face while working toward long-term, systemic culture and policy change to create a more safe and equitable world for all women.

Your vote this August will determine how we divide our monthly donation among these three progressive causes. Be sure to cast your vote to support one, two or all three by August 31.

CREDO members who use our products are the reason why we are able to make these donations each month. Learn more about CREDO Mobile, the carrier with a conscience.

Our July grantees thank you for your support

Each month, CREDO members vote on how we distribute funding to three incredible organizations. Those small actions add up – with one click, you can help fund groups fighting for civil rights, climate justice and racial equality. In July, over 75,000 CREDO members voted to distribute our monthly donation to the ACLU, Amazon Watch and the NAACP Legal Defense Fund.

These donations are made possible by CREDO customers and the revenue they generate by using our services. The distribution depends entirely on the votes of CREDO members like you. And for that, our July grant recipients thank you.

American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
$64,142
“We are so grateful to CREDO members for helping us resist the Trump administration’s unconstitutional agenda. Thank you for standing with us.” To learn more, visit aclu.org.

Amazon Watch
$44,617
“Thanks so much to CREDO and all of its members! With your help, Amazon Watch can continue our work to stop Amazon destruction, advance indigenous solutions and support climate justice.” To learn more, visit amazonwatch.org.

NAACP Legal Defense Fund
$41,241
“Thank you for joining the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s fight for equality. Your support will help LDF combat attacks on our civil rights. Together, we can achieve racial justice in a society that fulfills the promise of equality for all Americans.” To learn more, visit naacpldf.org.

Now check out the three causes we are funding in August, and cast your vote to help distribute our donations.

CREDO members who use our products are the reason why we are able to make these donations each month. Learn more about CREDO Mobile, the carrier with a conscience.