Hey! Are you going to vote today and it's your first time or maybe you're just unfamiliar and you're not sure how to do it?

No worries at all. Even experienced voters have to sometimes check and make sure their ducks are in a row.

Here are some quick bits of advice. (thread)
1. Make sure you're registered to vote and find out where to vote. You can do both of those here: iwillvote.com

Just plug in your address for the polling location and basic ID information for the registration, and voila!

Easy. Takes 30 seconds.
2. It's totally fine and common to get to your polling place and realize you don't know how to vote. That's why the election workers are there. Their intended purpose is to make the process as smooth and easy as possible. You should feel free to ask them anything about voting.
3. For example, maybe you get your ballot, and something about it is confusing. Don't hesitate to ask one of the election workers there to help you figure it out. Seriously, they live for that. They'll be thrilled to help.
4. But maybe something feels kinda off. Don't ignore that instinct. If you're worried at all that you're being misled by an election worker or the process itself, immediately call:

1-866-OUR-VOTE

You'll talk to a real live human who's basically a voting superhero. They got you.
5. The folks at @866OURVOTE are all about helping voters through all sorts of problems. Don't worry about taking a question to them that's too small. They've seen it all. They're volunteering today specifically to answer those questions. You'd seriously make their day by calling.
6. Let's say an election worker tells you that you can't vote for some reason. Even if their reasoning makes sense, you can and should still verify they're right. The folks at 866-OUR-VOTE absolutely *live* for these calls. Call them. They'll verify and talk about next steps.
7. Every state/locality has their polls close at different times. This graphic is an overview, but you can and should verify at iwillvote.com (just enter your address). But here's the really important part, so if you take anything away, it should be this...
8. As long as you're in line by the time your polling location closes, you get to vote. Guaranteed. It doesn't matter how long the line is. It doesn't matter what states have been called. It doesn't matter what the news is saying. If you're in line, you get to vote. Period.
9. In some locations, the line to vote can be quite long. Our system is broken. Some elected officials intentionally make it harder to vote. We need to fix that. In the meantime, make sure you got what you need to stand in line for a bit: fully charged phone, water, etc.
10. Don't be afraid to make a fuss. You're not bothering anyone that shouldn't be bothered. This is your RIGHT, and those who are in charge of it are required to ensure you're able to exercise that right.

So, go vote! Get that sticker. Feel the pride. /thread

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More from @cmclymer

31 Oct
There are less than 3 days until the election and as with every cycle, there are folks who believe their vote doesn't matter. But if you ask anyone who was living in Virginia in 2017 + voted, regardless of their party, they'll tell you a single vote can mean everything. (thread)
New Jersey and Virginia have their elections in odd-numbered years, and the 2017 gubernatorial and legislature elections were seen as the first big referendums on the Trump White House. At the time, Democrats were very pessimistic. 2016 had rattled us for obvious reasons.
But folks were volunteering and canvassing and calling voters, and on election night, it paid off. Big. Ralph Northam was elected governor in a near-landslide. Dems swept statewide offices. But the big surprise was the State House...
Read 24 tweets
31 Oct
This document is fascinating. The Trump White House compiled 34 pages of celebrity outreach information with details on their political leanings for what became a failed COVID-related campaign reelection effort: oversight.house.gov/sites/democrat…
@chrissyteigen: "Teigen is a vocal critic of President Trump"

No shit πŸ˜‚
@Beyonce: "Has a net rating of 63% favorable among democrats, and -3% among Rep."
Read 13 tweets
30 Oct
Since inauguration, Trump has lied to the public 22,247 times in 1,317 days, thru Aug. 11th. The team at @washingtonpost who tracks these in a database (+ refers to them broadly as "misleading claims") reported last week they're two months behind schedule because of the volume.
That's nearly 17 lies a day Trump has told, every single day, to the public, for nearly four years.
Read 4 tweets
29 Oct
Hey friends, here's a list who I'm supporting in local races in D.C. this year. (short thread)
For Delegate to the U.S. House, it's clear that Congresswoman @EleanorNorton deserves another term, and god willing, we'll all soon be supporting her as a voting member of Congress in the next few years.

We need #DCStatehood NOW.
For the At-Large D.C. City Council seats, there are more than two dozen candidates. I wish I could vote for five or six of these leaders, but we only get to support two on the ballot.

I'm proudly voting for Christina Henderson (@chenderson) and Ed Lazere (@edlazere).
Read 8 tweets
27 Oct
OK, so, I'm biased, but I can't remember the last time I had so much fun watching a show than I did binging @Netflix's "The Queens' Gambit". It is criminally short--just seven episodes--and I may threaten to cancel my subscription if they don't order a second season. (thread)
Where do I even start with this show's brilliance? There's so much to discuss. First, let's get this out of the way: it's based on a 1983 novel of the same name by Walter Tevis, which was published to damn good reviews. I have not yet read it, and I plan to after the election.
The plot: a young girl loses her brilliant and troubled mother in a horrific car crash and learns how to play chess from a janitor in an orphanage. The orphans are being drugged. She develops a drug addiction. She gets adopted by a very troubled woman.
Read 25 tweets
27 Oct
Refresher:

The Constitution does not specify the number of seats on the Supreme Court. This power was left to Congress, which set the Supreme Court's size at one chief justice and five associates in the Judiciary Act of 1789. It was then legally changed seven times. (thread)
It underwent five full legal implementations:

1789-1807: six seats
1807-1837: seven seats
1837-1866: ten seats
1866-1867: nine seats
1867-1869: eight seats
1869-present: nine seats
And twice, legislation changed its size but was never implemented for various reasons, notably the Judiciary Act of 1801 (or Midnight Judges Act), which would have reduced its size to five upon the next vacancy but was repealed by the Judiciary Act of 1802.
Read 18 tweets

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