Archon Fung and Stephen Richer are joined by Michelle Feldman, political director at Mobile Voting, a nonprofit, nonpartisan initiative working to make voting easier with expanded access to mobile voting.
Anchorage, Alaska, is pioneering mobile voting, allowing voters to cast ballots for municipal elections from their phones. If successful, Anchorage could offer a blueprint for the future of voting across America. But with election mistrust at record highs, will voters have faith in the accuracy of mobile votes?
To discuss the latest news and the future of voting by phone, this week, co-hosts Archon Fung and Stephen Richer will be joined by Michelle Feldman, political director at Mobile Voting, a nonprofit, nonpartisan initiative working to make voting easier with expanded access to mobile voting.
Michelle Feldman is Political Director for Mobile Voting, a nonprofit, nonpartisan initiative working to make voting easier with expanded access to mobile voting, especially in local and primary elections and for voters with inherent barriers to existing voting options. Since 2018, Movile Voting has helped fund pilots in over 20 elections across seven states – Colorado, Oregon, South Carolina, Utah, Virginia, Washington, and West Virginia – primarily for a mixture of voters, including Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act (UOCAVA) voters and voters with disabilities.