Group
launches website to boost voter turnout
By Maria Colicchio
In a push to boost voter turnout for this
year's presidential election, the League of Women Voters
announced Thursday the creation of a website to increase turnout for
Massachusetts, with organization president Madhu Sridhar calling current
voter participation "unacceptable."
The site, www.votinginfo.info, is designed to educate Massachusetts voters
by providing information
about candidates and on how and where voters can vote, Sridhar said. She
said using a website is the
"most accessible way of contacting the general public."
The website will offer "voters information about voter registration,
absentee voting, procedures at the polls, where their polling place is, who
the candidates are on their ballot and what their positions are that they
care about," Sridhar said. The site will also include a monthly newsletter,
an election quiz and instructions
on the voting process.
Sridhar said the commonwealth has room for improvement, noting that "eleven
states had a better turnout
for voting than Massachusetts."
Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin agreed with Sridhar that groups
"need to reach out to all communities, especially minorities and youth, and
get their full participation, and by achieving that we will
be successful." Galvin added that the best way for people to improve
government is by voting.
"People are frustrated with the government and with certain policies,"
Galvin said. "But what they don't understand is they have the power to
change it by voting."
"Voting is a right, not a privilege," said Leonard Alkins, president of the
Boston branch of the NAACP.
"No one should have the right to vote taken away except through death," he
said.
Alkins added that voting should not be denied to the homeless or
ex-convicts.
Sridhar said the website will be easily accessible to "all citizens who want
to make important public policy decisions."
The League of Women Voters hopes to use the site to register minorities and
young people, because
only one in three eligible voters in Massachusetts between 18 and 24 years
old voted in the last election, Sridhar said. Among Hispanics and Asians,
only one in five voted. |