Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, the country’s leading architect of suppressive voting restrictions, has described himself as “the ACLU’s worst nightmare.” On Sunday night, the ACLU struck back. The organization, which has seen a surge in membership and donations since the election, launched a 50-state campaign to expand voting rights—and it held the kickoff event in Kobach’s backyard, in a packed auditorium at the University of Kansas in Lawrence.
The campaign, called “Let People Vote,” is the largest effort in recent years to fight back against Republican voter suppression policies. It aims to mobilize people around the country to fight to change these policies. The event in Lawrence was accompanied by 600 simultaneous satellite events across the country.
Though ACLU chapters in each state will develop their own specific plans, the campaign will focus on four major policy recommendations for states to adopt:
- Election reforms like automatic voter registration, Election Day registration, online registration, and early voting.
- Redistricting reform, namely the creation of independent commissions to draw legislative districts in order to curb partisan and racial gerrymandering in advance of the 2020 cycle.
- Restoring voting rights to ex-offenders. More than 6 million people can’t vote nationally because of felon disenfranchisement laws, according to the Sentencing Project. The ACLU is investing $5 million in a 2018 ballot referendum to restore voting rights to ex-offenders in Florida, where 1.5 million people are disenfranchised by such laws, including 1 in 5 African American residents.
- Fighting voter suppression, including repealing voter ID laws.
The ACLU’s membership has quadrupled to 1.6 million since the election, leading it to expand beyond its typical focus on litigation and policy work. “We’ve never done grassroots mobilization before,” says Faiz Shakir, the ACLU’s national political director. “The only way you can have a national grassroots movement to expand voting rights in America is to go state by state by state. That’s damn hard to do.”