Let’s build a new Blue Wave for 2024!
We can elect Kamala Harris as President and Tim Walz for VP, and give them the Congressional majority, if we put in the work this year. We need to build awareness of what the Biden-Harris administration has been doing for all of us, what Trump would do to us if he gets back into power, and that we can make that choice this fall.
What’s on this page:
Get out the vote (GOTV) by calling voters on the phone
GOTV by texting voters
Celebrate voting on day one with the California Grassroots Alliance
What you should do now to prepare to vote in October
Information about what’s on your ballot
Upcoming candidate forums
Here's what you should do now.
If your registration is inactive or your signature or address has changed, register to vote.
Sign up to get notifications when your ballot gets mailed out and when it gets counted.
You’ll get your ballot in your mail in early October. Once you have your ballot, then you can vote easily from home in three easy steps:
Start filling your ballot out at home.
You don’t need to do it all at once. You can piece it out according to your schedule.
You don’t need to wait until November. You can start as soon as you get it and take your time.
You don’t need to go to a specific place to fill it out. You can fill it out at home, then mail it back or drop it off.
When you’ve finished filling out your ballot (but no later than Tuesday, November 5): Put your completed ballot cards in the return envelope, sign and date the return envelope!!!, and then put the return envelope in any blue USPS mailbox or official county ballot drop box. If you choose to mail your ballot, we recommend that you put it in the mailbox no later than Monday, November 4.
After you drop off your ballot: Track your ballot, either with the City’s Voter Portal or with the state’s Where’s My Ballot? system, to see when it’s received and when it’s counted. Tracking your ballot is also a fast way to learn if there’s an issue that requires you to cure your ballot, such as forgetting to sign the return envelope.
Voter information
Official sources
California Voter Information Guide (out now!)
SF Voter Information Pamphlet (out now!)
SF Department of Elections informational video about the general election (30 minutes)
More voter information
Mission Local Supervisor candidate interviews
Mayoral debate hosted by KQED and SF Chronicle
Progressive recommendations
Indivisible SF says No on Prop 36
The League of Pissed-Off Voters (full guide now available!)
Cross-reference resources
Blue Voter Guide will show you who’s endorsed which candidates and what positions on propositions. Blue Voter Guide is available throughout California, and in numerous other states across the US.
Get involved at these upcoming events
GOTV phone banks
GOTV text banks
Write from home in your own time
You can start writing to voters right now to let them know their vote is needed. If you’re interested, here’s a page with postcarding resources. You can sign up through any of these excellent groups:
Postcards to Voters is writing to voters in Florida. If you sign up now, you’ll be notified as they take up more races later in the year.
Vote Forward is writing letters to build voter turnout in several states.
Activate America is writing and phone banking for a variety of races in California and a couple of other states.
Grassroots Democrats HQ is also writing to turn out the vote in California and a few other states.
Indivisible National has Majority over MAGA Mail. They’ll provide the postcards, the postage, and the lists—you write and send them from home. They’re also writing letters with Vote Forward.
You can sign up for any of these and start writing today.
Flip the House by sweeping six crucial districts in California
The road to taking back the House runs through California. We’re proud members of the California Grassroots Alliance, a network of organizations across California that are working to win back control of Congress to keep it out of fascist hands and deliver for all Americans.