Guerrilla Voter Registration
Ten easy steps to change the world
1. Go to http://www.fec.gov/votregis/pdf/nvra.pdf and print out pages 2-5. (This is a .pdf file, page numbers refer to the Acrobat reader pages.)
2. Scroll down to locate the specific voter registration instructions for your state. Print the page listing the instructions for your state. (State-by-state instructions are listed in pages 8-32.)
3. Go to Kinkos or go to work and wait for the boss to leave. Make one double-sided copy with the registration form (pg. 4) on one side and the mailer (pg. 5) on the other.
4. Write the mailing address for your state's voter registration office on the mailer. Write neatly and use dark ink. Make 50 photocopies of this double-sided page.
5. (optional) Purchase 50 first-class U.S. postage stamps. (This will cost you $18.50.)
6. Get a bunch of cheap pens and a clipboard. These are available from local office supply stores, or from the supply closet at work (again, wait for the boss to leave).
7. Select a public location where people gather. If you wish to target a demographic that is more likely to vote for candidates from a particular party then you should factor this in your choice of location. If you are a Republican, try a local country club or a corporate trade convention. If you are a Democrat, try pretty much anywhere else.
8. Take your voter registration forms, clipboard and pens to the chosen location and help 50 people register to vote. If you have completed step No. 5, you can offer to mail the completed forms on behalf of your newly registered voters. You may wish to encourage these new voters to consider the candidate of your choice, but reassure them that their registration is in no way conditioned by their voting preference or party affiliation. Smile.
9. Mail the completed registration forms to your state's voter registration office.
10. Repeat steps 1-9.
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Addditional steps and hints
* To assist people with the form, you may want to fill out a sample form in advance. Do this with a sharpie in friendly, legible handwriting. Get the nice people at Kinkos to laminate this sample copy for you. While you're there, you can also get them to enlarge and laminate pages 2-3 and the instructions for your state.
* A folding table and a large, red-white-and-blue sign reading "Register to Vote" can help to persuade the otherwise reluctant that you are, indeed, "for real." Be prepared to respond to the question, "Is this for real?"
* Contact the local office for your party or the office of a local official and request literature that you can distribute to prospective voters. Depending on how well they have their act together, your local party office may also have some insight on a good choice of location for your guerrilla voter registration drive.
* Admittedly, this process favors Democrats. The kinds of places where predominantly Republican crowds gather also tend to be the kind of places where they frown on people with clipboards talking about democracy and empowering the electorate, and where they tend to discourage this sort of thing by employing humorless security guards to chase you off the sidewalk. When this happens, be polite and remember that your goal is to register voters, not to engage in a First Amendment debate with an underpaid security guard. Before agreeing to leave, first try to register the security guards themselves.









Give up. Bush is gonna win again, no matter what you try, dude. And I'm as upset about this as you are.
Posted by: Dan | Nov 26, 2003 at 08:46 PM
How about..."If you are a Democrat, try any Planned Murderhood office."
Posted by: Jeff | Nov 27, 2003 at 11:24 AM
Excellent! I love this post :)
Posted by: Karl; | Nov 27, 2003 at 11:37 AM
Thanks for the tips - it'll be great for our College Democrats booth. Lets get the young and disenchanted to the polls!
Posted by: miniette | Dec 01, 2003 at 02:21 AM
Jeff: Because, of course, good Republicans never need access to reproductive health care or, heaven forbid, affordable birth control to make sure they don't need those abortion services...
Sigh.
Posted by: Ab_Normal | Dec 02, 2003 at 01:26 PM
places to go to register voters:
1) libraries or public areas of technical colleges, community colleges, trade schools, night schools, etc.
2) Rooms where people wait: Bus stations, Drivers license waiting rooms, clinics.
3) Bars: never tried this. could be bad, but worth a try
4) city parks
Also, sign up to drive people or walk people to the polls on election day.
Posted by: Tim | Dec 02, 2003 at 05:41 PM
Nice, nice! I'm starting a website specifically for GOTV, so these little tips are helpful :)
Posted by: Julie | Dec 09, 2003 at 12:38 AM
a) I MOVED TO FLORIDA with the specific intent of gurilla voter registration. Thanks for this website,
b) I'm going to try to give bars the paperwork and a big friendly sign that says "register to vote here" then pick up and mail the stuff weekly. You should try it in your town, too. I first registered to vote at a bar in Seattle.
c) Be sure to mark the SEND ABSENTEE BALLOT box on all the rigistration pages before they're photocopied, we NEED a paper trail, and it makes it easier for people to remember to vote and get help reading the ballot if they need it.
Posted by: ana in miami | Mar 18, 2004 at 03:02 AM
I am a Republican but it has occurred to me that we are all Sheep by letting ourselves be required to register for any particular party. Politicians don't always have their party on their flyers. Maybe the whole system needs to change so the Politicians won't be able to take any of us for granted. I am going to change to Independent in PA. I realize that states voter registration systems do vary. Any comments on this? Could we collectively gain something from this idea?
Posted by: John J. Pellegrino | Oct 16, 2004 at 12:00 AM