IVote explained

iVote is an American voting rights organization. The New York Times described iVote's efforts as "the first major push to counter the Republican moves with a legislative strategy to expand voter rights."[1] In 2022, Axios called iVote "one of the biggest winners of election night."[2]

History

The group was founded in 2014 by former aides to Barack Obama and Bill Clinton.[3] Ellen Kurz, who has been called "a one-person Paul Revere, warning of the dangers of vote-suppression efforts,"[4] is the president of iVote.[5]

iVote led the campaign[6] to pass automatic voter registration in Nevada, and has run additional electoral and legislative campaigns in 11 states to pass automatic voter registration.[7]

In 2018, iVote raised over $14 million to run successful campaigns in U.S. swing states, including Michigan (Jocelyn Benson),[8] Arizona (Katie Hobbs),[9] Colorado (Jena Griswold),[10] and Nevada (Automatic Voter Registration ballot initiative).[6]

In Arizona, iVote's investment led to pro-Hobbs' efforts outspending the Republican opponent "two-to-one on television."[9] In Michigan, iVote's "spending amounted to more than the Republican candidate, Mary Treder Lange of Gross Pointe Farms, raised for her campaign."[8] In Nevada, iVote led the more than $10 million campaign[6] to pass an automatic voter registration ballot initiative with 59.57% of the vote.[6]

In 2020, iVote raised $18 million for a voter education effort in swing states that reached more than 15 million voters.[7]

Then in 2022, iVote "invested $15 million in secretary of state races that typically fly under the radar."[11] The organization ran ads targeting four states with Republican nominees "who didn't accept the validity of the 2020 election outcome," and all four were defeated: Kim Crockett (Minnesota), Mark Finchem (Arizona), Kristina Karamo (Michigan), and Jim Marchant (Nevada).[12] iVote's investment in Arizona was an historic[13] amount of money spent on a secretary of state's race.

Notes and References

  1. News: Shear . Michael D. . 2015-11-09 . Democratic Group Called iVote Pushes Automatic Voter Registration . en-US . The New York Times . 2022-06-16 . 0362-4331.
  2. Web site: ⚡ Extreme defeat . 2022-12-02 . Axios . en.
  3. News: The exciting war to make secretaries of state more boring . en-US . Washington Post . 2022-06-16 . 0190-8286.
  4. News: 2018-10-24 . Voter-Suppression Tricks Are on the Ballot, Too . en . Bloomberg.com . 2022-06-16.
  5. Web site: Panetta . Grace . The Trump-inspired battles over new voting laws will shape the 2022 governors' races . 2022-06-16 . Business Insider . en-US.
  6. Web site: Nevada Question 5, Automatic Voter Registration via DMV Initiative (2018) .
  7. Web site: ELLEN KURZ (she/her) - NYU Alumni Changemaker of the Year (GAL ’80. https://web.archive.org/web/20220401072525/https://www.nyu.edu/alumni/changemakers//bios/bio-ellen-kurz.php. 2022-04-01. New York University).
  8. Web site: National Voting Rights Group Spent Nearly $1 Million on Michigan's 2018 Race for Secretary of State . 11 March 2019 .
  9. Web site: Gardiner . Dustin . Behind Katie Hobbs' win: How Democrats flipped Arizona's 2nd-highest office . 2022-06-16 . The Arizona Republic . en-US.
  10. Web site: Tale of two campaigns for Secretary of State: Dem is backed by advocacy group, GOP incumbent lets record speak . 22 October 2018 .
  11. Web site: ⚡ Extreme defeat . 2022-12-02 . Axios . en.
  12. Web site: ⚡ Extreme defeat . 2022-12-02 . Axios . en.
  13. Web site: iVote to spend $5 million in Arizona Secretary of State race . 2022-12-02 . NBC News . en.