For the 50th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act, 18 Million Rising, an Asian American digital activist group, launched a new Indiegogo campaign to create a translation matching app designed to increase voter participation in next year’s presidential elections.
The mobile app, called VoterVOX, is described as “one part civic tech, one part grassroots organizing, and three parts cultural connection.”
VoterVOX seeks to connect multilingual Asian Americans with voters in their communities needing language assistance in order to address continuing language barriers facing Asian American and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) at the polls and resultant voter disenfranchisement.
According to recent studies, AAPIs are three times more likely than Latinos to cite language barrier as a reason for not voting.
“Nearly half of all adult AAPIs are not comfortable in English (the technical term is limited English proficient), and I want the other 50 percent of us to take initiative in helping them participate fully in civic life,” C.M. Samala, executive director of 18 Million Rising told NBC News.
A new report by Asian Americans Advancing Justice | AAJC, entitled “50 Years of the Voting Rights Act: An Asian American Perspective,” found that language assistance is vital to the growing AAPI community, many of whom are immigrants. Section 203 of the Voting Rights Act requires bilingual ballots and assistance at the polls for limited English proficient voters, but only when the population that speaks a minority language reaches a certain threshold in the community.
As a result, many voters from smaller, less concentrated language groups who need assistance are left out. Section 208, however, allows voters to receive assistance from a person of their choice, and exit polls show that this is a solution many AAPIs utilize.
VoterVOX works by matching a volunteer translator with a voter identified by community groups as needing help understanding the ballot. The volunteer translator meets the voter at a local library or community center, and they go over the voter’s mail-in ballot in the preferred language. To finish, the voter mails in his or her own ballot, and the volunteer translator uploads his or her ballot translation or technical language notes to share with other volunteer translators.
Samala sees this as just the first step to better engagement for multiple communities.
“As we make democracy accessible in more languages for AAPI communities, we also hope that VoterVOX grows into a platform that all limited English proficient Americans can use to improve access to voting, health care, housing, and other aspects of civic life,” she said. (with reports from NBC News)