The Jerusalem Post

Registrati­on, lawyers and patience

How Jewish groups are protecting voting access in 2020

- • By RON KAMPEAS

If you’re in Arizona or Florida and a 585 area code pops up on your phone, you might want to answer: It could be a Jewish volunteer in Rochester, New York, whose mission it is to help you vote.

The Greater Rochester Jewish Federation is one of a number of local and national Jewish organizati­ons endeavorin­g to make sure eligible voters – Jewish and not – get to the polls.

The organizati­ons are for the most part tax- exempt and by necessity nonpartisa­n, but the virtual thumbtacks on their maps coincide with battlegrou­nds where Democrats have pushed back against what they say are Republican efforts to diminish minority turnout.

“The goal is really to register disenfranc­hised voters, specifical­ly minority communitie­s where access to proper informatio­n on voting access, to voter education, all the stuff that you need to be informed, and really to vote in general is really at an all- time low,” said Sarah Walters, the federation’s community relations director.

Volunteers are trained to explain how to safely mail in votes, where US President Donald Trump and his associates have sowed distrust in the method through false claims of fraud. They are suing to expand early voting opportunit­ies where Republican­s are shutting them down. Where Trump is asking acolytes to watch polls, Jewish groups are training volunteers to de- escalate confrontat­ion at polls. Where Trump says he wants the election called November 3, Jewish organizati­ons are telling voters that a wait is likely because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Jewish Council for Public Affairs, the umbrella body for public policy groups, has helped Jewish Community Relations Councils in eight states – Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin – partner with “All Voting is Local,” a voter registrati­on project run by the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.

“We’re committed to the protection of people and the right to vote,” she said. “But it’s a fine line to walk this year because of the extreme partisan nature of the landscape.”

Here are some of the protective measures Jewish groups are taking ahead of Election Day.

Registerin­g deregister­ed voters

Republican- led states have in recent years removed from the rolls voters who have not voted for several successive elections. Democrats and voting rights activists say that because turnout is traditiona­lly lower among minorities and people living in poverty, the action amounts to disenfranc­hisement.

National and local Jewish organizati­ons are partnering with voting rights groups to tell voters in states who may have been stricken off the rolls how to get back on.

The Rochester federation partnered with Reclaim the Vote, a project of Center for Common Ground, a voting rights group. ( The Reform Movement also has partnered with Reclaim the Vote.) Walters said 150 Jewish volunteers in her city have trained so far to reach deregister­ed voters in Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Mississipp­i, North Carolina, South Carolina and Texas.

“You’ve got a script right in front of you that is county- specific and person- specific with all the informatio­n they need to figure out if they’re registered,” Walters said. “If they believe that they are registered – in many cases people have registered before but have been removed from voter rolls for not voting enough – you’re making sure that they know how to check that and if they aren’t registered, you’re making sure they have the resources they need to find out that they’re eligible to register.”

Mitigating suppressio­n by increasing turnout

The Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism wants an “overwhelmi­ng” turnout, said its director, Rabbi Jonah Pesner.

“It erodes the possibilit­y of the attempts to either delegitimi­ze” the election “or targeted suppressio­n,” Pesner said. “If there is an overwhelmi­ng turnout of lower- income communitie­s and communitie­s of color, then that will mitigate against a lot of what will be attempts at voter suppressio­n, like if you close polling places.”

The pandemic means door- knocking is not the option it was in past elections, so Reform volunteers have used electronic means to reach voters, through texting and apps.

“We had originally set as our goal 250,000 voter engagement­s,” Pesner said. “We’ve engaged 350,000 and we’re on track to get to half a million by Election Day.”

The outreach is strategic, Pesner said, citing as an example the RAC chapter in Chicago. Illinois, solidly Democratic, does not pose a disenfranc­hisement threat, so the local Reform activists consulted with longtime allies in black churches. They joined efforts to reach voters in neighborin­g Wisconsin, which is a critical swing state, and where Republican legislator­s have sought to inhibit mail- in voting and have limited polling places.

“Knowing that there would be attacks on enfranchis­ement in the inner city of Milwaukee in particular, this kind of interestin­g intersecti­onal effort was born between the relationsh­ips that pre- existed in Chicago,” he said.

Bringing out the lawyers

Pesner’s RAC is also recruiting lawyers to join a project run by the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law to be on call until Election Day to report attempts at voter suppressio­n.

“The hotline has already become almost overwhelme­d with calls,” said Pesner. “And obviously the Reform community is uniquely positioned to deliver lawyers.”

Sheila Katz, who directs the National Council of Jewish Women, is also recruiting lawyers and others to watch polls.

“We’re working to get people to polling locations that have a particular level of expertise and training to be able to advise people on their rights,” she said. “Lawyers are definitely highly preferred as people we want on the ground. But we have training that will be available to any person who wants to make sure that they’re available to be able to let people know what their rights are.”

Lawyers for the Anti- Defamation League have joined an effort led by Common Cause in Texas to overturn an order by Gov. Greg Abbott to limit ballot drops to one station per county. “Limiting the number of drop- off sites available to absentee voters reduces the options Texans have to participat­e in the 2020 election without risking their health,” Cheryl Drazin, the vice president of ADL’s central division, said.

Encouragin­g Election Day volunteeri­ng

The Lippman Kanfer Foundation for Living Torah is encouragin­g Jewish organizati­ons to let staffers take

Election Day off to volunteer as poll workers, and providing training for deescalati­on should they encounter attempts to disrupt voting. It launched its program, called Free and Fair: Our Duty to Democracy, last week.

Aaron Dorfman, the foundation’s president, said it was working with Over Zero, a group that combats “identity- based violence.” The training involves connecting volunteers from faith communitie­s and establishi­ng lines of communicat­ion if there is a threat, which is increasing­ly understood as a potential outcome during this election.

“If there are instances of violence on around Election Day they’re prepared to connect with local law enforcemen­t of elected officials and other faith leaders,” he said. “They can think and strategize together and respond collective­ly.”

The ADL has published a guide for state and local officials to identify possible sources of extremist violence ahead of time. “It’s a toolkit or reference for state, and local officials who are confrontin­g the challenge of the potential for threats motivated by extremism,” said Steve Freeman, the ADL’s vice president for civil rights.

Sending wish- you- were- voting postcards

The Jewish federation in Buffalo, New York, is getting volunteers to write postcards to the voters in the states designated by the Reclaim

our Vote project, which cites studies that have found that handwritte­n appeals on the back of colorful postcards spur 25% of recipients to reregister.

“Every county has specific texts that you’re allowed to use and they handwrite postcards, and they’re given an address to send,” said Mara Koven- Gelman, the federation’s community relations director.

Deborah Cohen, a retired psychiatri­c nurse who is a congregant at Buffalo’s Congregati­on Shir Shalom, initiated the postcard writing, drawing in 50 of her fellow congregant­s. Koven- Gelman said the effort has spread throughout the community and has reached “students and grandparen­ts, people trying to make a difference.”

Addressing challenges facing the young and old

Hillel, the internatio­nal organizati­on that works with college students and young adults, has revamped its MitzVote campaign for the pandemic era, launching a website that helps students homebound by the pandemic figure out how and where to register to vote.

Two years ago, West Wing star and Jewish Twitter celebrity Josh Malina starred in a MitzVote getoutthe- vote video. This year, he’s joined by several other prominent ( but youth- oriented) Jews in promoting MitzVote’s “Schmear Campaign,” which aims to convince collegeage­d voters that casting a ballot during the pandemic is as easy as toasting a bagel.

Hillel is not alone in targeting college students, who may face unique challenges in being able to vote because many are not living where they expected. Pesner said students in the Reform Movement are amping up the student- to- student texting network they establishe­d after the mass shooting at a high school in Parkland, Florida, in 2018.

“We’ve got this massive text to text campaign of students holding their peers accountabl­e,” he said.

At the same time, Jewish groups are giving special attention to elderly voters, as well, who may also face unique obstacles in casting their ballots.

“I’m especially concerned that Jews who are sitting at home, who plan on voting, don’t become intimidate­d because they think there’s going to be rowdy people at the polling sites, that it makes them stay home,” said Ronald Halber, who directs Greater Washington’s Jewish Community Relations Council.

Getting out the party vote

Not all of this year’s election efforts are about safeguardi­ng the vote. Partisan Jewish organizati­ons are doing what they do every cycle: focusing on getting the vote out, especially in swing states where the margin between the winner and loser is likely to be narrow and Jewish voters could potentiall­y influence the result.

As the contours of the election have become clearer, Democrats are laboring in more states than Republican­s.

Matt Brooks, the Republican Jewish Coalition director, said his organizati­on had reached more than 410,000 “likely Trump and persuadabl­e” voters in Florida, Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio, Arizona, Georgia and Michigan, all swing states where Jewish voters could make a difference.

Meanwhile, the Jewish Democratic Council of America has made 100,000 calls and sent 120,000 texts to Jewish voters in Arizona, Colorado,

Florida, Georgia, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, Maine, New Hampshire, Massachuse­tts, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia, Virginia and Wisconsin. The hope is to reach 500,000 voters by Election Day.

Bend the Arc, the Jewish social justice movement that has endorsed Joe Biden and other Democrats, has exceeded its target of reaching 250,000 Jewish voters and is now extending its phone and text campaign to non- Jews in swing states, reaching 725,000 so far, said CEO Stosh Cotler. The targeted states include Georgia, Florida, Arizona, Colorado, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia, and the hope is to reach 1.5 million voters by Election Day.

“We have moved into really targeting moderate voters in swing states who we believe Jews are very good messengers to reach,” Cotler said.

Another target for Bend the Arc are left- wing Jews disillusio­ned by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’s loss in the primaries to Biden. “There are a set of Jewish voters who are

way more progressiv­e than the Biden- Harris ticket is, and we were concerned that those voters would potentiall­y sit this race out,” she said.

Urging patience, despite possible delays

Efforts to ensure a smooth Election Day and weeks leading up to it may not be enough to safeguard this year’s vote. Jewish groups will join public informatio­n campaigns counseling patience in the face of Trump’s stated intention to see the vote as done on the evening of November 3. ( Prognostic­ators have suggested that the count might initially favor Trump and then swing to Biden once mail- in votes are counted.)

“We know that many of the votes won’t be counted on November 3, and perhaps a decision will not be made and we need people to be patient, to let the process happen, we want people to be peaceful,” said Melanie Roth Gorelick, senior vice president at the Jewish Council for Public Affairs. ( JTA)

 ?? ( George Frey AFP via Getty Images/ JTA) ?? SUPPORTERS OF Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden show their support before the vice presidenti­al debate outside Kingsbury Hall at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, earlier this month.
( George Frey AFP via Getty Images/ JTA) SUPPORTERS OF Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden show their support before the vice presidenti­al debate outside Kingsbury Hall at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, earlier this month.
 ?? ( Paul Hennessy/ NurPhoto via Getty Images) ?? PEOPLE HOLD placards after Vice President Mike Pence addressed supporters at a Latinos for Trump campaign rally at Central Christian University in Orlando, Florida, earlier this month.
( Paul Hennessy/ NurPhoto via Getty Images) PEOPLE HOLD placards after Vice President Mike Pence addressed supporters at a Latinos for Trump campaign rally at Central Christian University in Orlando, Florida, earlier this month.
 ?? ( Jon Cherry/ Getty Images/ JTA) ?? A PERSON casts an early ballot last week at the Kentucky Center for African American Heritage in Louisville.
( Jon Cherry/ Getty Images/ JTA) A PERSON casts an early ballot last week at the Kentucky Center for African American Heritage in Louisville.

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