Once again, these postcards have nothing on them to indicate party or candidate, and the note that is written on them is apolitical. Basically it says “Dear John, Thank you for being a voter. Your family and friends may need a reminder to vote. Please remind them to vote in the election on Tuesday, November 5th, 2024.”
I’d also missed it four years ago. Most interesting to me was the end of the thread with a convo between @Reply and @Temporary_Name . They almost sounded like bots. And nobody else was paying attention any more.
No apologies needed If there was some operation to turn me into a bot, I’d probably accept it (but maybe turn down the preachiness setting a notch). So you weren’t far off!
I’m registered Democrat. I vote in every election, off years included.
I just got a Harris/Walz postcard with a handwritten note – reminding me to vote for the proposition on the back of the ballot. (It’s an equal-rights thing including, among some generally accepted stuff which I think is already in the state constitution, gender identity and “reproductive healthcare and autonomy”.)
I expect there may be people who show up every time but who don’t think, despite the signs at the polling places, to look at the back of their ballots; which is where NY generally puts propositions. In which case it would make sense to target reliable Democratic voters with such postcards; though I didn’t need to be reminded.
Our postcards went in the mail yesterday. My wife ran into a few other ladies at the post office who were also dropping off their postcards, and the guy behind the counter told her there had been a steady stream all day.
To directly answer the question, i think anything that reminded me i hadn’t yet voted would be marginally likely to push me to do that. And i at least glance at every hand -written correspondence i get. So yes, by some tiny fraction.
I signed up to send them out for the National Education Association. I think I was writing to other NEA members who were targeted as intermittent voters, but I’m not sure. The postcards were prestamped and preaddressed, so I just wrote the message (basically, “I’m voting up and down the ballot for candidates who support public education,” yadda yadda) and popped them in the mail.
I wish they’d focused on North Carolina, because hoo boy do I have things to say about our Republican superintendent candidate (she could be a Batman villain if she wasn’t all talk). But I got cards for Georgia and Nevada. And they only sent me 23 cards.
My wife has done hundreds of cards. I think they’re important.
I’d be inclined to reply to that first one “Great! I could use the help!”
And I agree – that second one is a real good reason to not elect Trump. Not that “The Grand Dragon of Trump Klan” of wherever is going to like me, whether he wins or he loses; but he’ll be a lot less powerful if he loses.
I would almost wonder if that second one in particular isn’t put out by somebody opposed to Trump who isn’t thinking clearly (as opposed to somebody favoring Trump who is by definition not thinking clearly.)
I signed up with a progressive turnout organization, and sent 200 postcards to NC registered voters. Last batch went out last night, which I hope is in time. I’ve been sick, and didn’t want to mail my virii to voters.
Mine either! I got a package with 200 postcards, a list of addresses, and two rolls of stamps from a woman on another website who had signed up, but has recently had some major health issues and couldn’t do it. I offered to reimburse her for the shipping (she’d been reimbursed for the postage) but she said I didn’t have to. It took a week to get them all filled out, but I did, and got them mailed out. I signed them with my first name, and put random stickers, most of them related to “Hello Kitty” because I already had them, on the postcards.