When social foot soldiers canvass a neighborhood, they do so armed with voting information, including how many individuals live in a home, their party, and when they last voted.
Some Democratic operatives have told The Federalist that Democrats are experienced at door-to-door canvassing because they have so much information about the folks in the suburbs where they work.
Then a philanthropic, Votermaps. nonprofit, is making that information —  , your information — available online, for free, to any member of the public.
The image is the brainchild of John LeFevre, an artist with a bank history, Morgan Warstler, a systems analyst who has founded many companies including GovWhiz Inc., according to his LinkedIn page, and Lawrence Abramson, who has a background in entertainment, business, finance. All three Republicans back past president Donald Trump’s election, but they claim that anyone can use their site because it is partisan.
They hope members of the public will be “vote police” and look for inconsistencies in voting membership.
” VoterMaps is a accessible, map-based repository of all vote narratives and present vote standing — updated in real-time. House by property. Block by stop. Express by state”, the site says. ” We level the data using field transparently, allowing all members to be activists, celebrities, fraud detectors, and champions of free and fair elections”.
In past elections, there have been troubling cases of suspected voting scams, Abramson told The Federalist. For instance, a large house building where 100 percent of the inhabitants requested mail-in vote.
No one can dispute the fact that trust and faith in this program have slowed considerably over the past few years, LeFevre told The Federalist. If we give the voting process a little bit of clarity, at the very least it will help recover some trust, faith, and integrity through transparency, both to encourage people to vote and to address issues of fraud, or even stop fraud.
Thus far, the site is populated with latest data just for Pennsylvania, but it has two says with old information, Ohio and Florida, to show people how it will work.
This year, the site added new information from the Pennsylvania Department of State. The page will then be updated overnight. As the information becomes available, they intend to include all the fight states in this manner.

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People can click on an energetic condition to view lines with numbers indicating the number of registered voters. When you zoom in, the numbers gradually decrease until the person is able to see specific houses on a road map.
One marker for each registered voting in the house is located at each target. There are a lot of signs in house structures.

Image CreditScreenshot
The voting names and party are listed in the data, which dates back to 2016 and includes the vote. Additionally, it displays whether the voter casts a mail ballot and whether they cast a ballot in a major or a general election. If they requested a mail-in vote for 2024, it does show that.

Image CreditScreenshot
The co-founders of the website picture residents looking at the map in their own community and finding irregularities. Did the person who passed away ten years ago just request a mail-in poll? Has your cousin moved aside but also shows up at your home address?  , Did the restaurant down the street where no one lives demand 10 mail-in votes?  , Did an apartment complex demand twice as numerous mail-in vote as previous years? LeFevre invites anyone who notices an anomaly to report it to X in order to see it.  ,
” We see too many issues that need to be resolved, and this is one way to open the eyes and ears on this,” said one author. Abramson said. ” Maybe people wake up and some people get a little anxious about doing things they should n’t be doing.”
But what about privacy? The data will make it simple to learn someone’s party affiliation, even if they never put a political sign in their yard.
It is public information, LeFevre said, and door knockers already have it. He claims there will be a button where you can click to have your name taken off the map. That is on the Pennsylvania map, but it is n’t on the sample states. Simply promise to vote, and your name is taken off. Only those who return their mail-in ballot will be able to see the map, he said, keeping the information current and revealing only those who have not yet cast their ballots.  ,
Although the voter list and history are made publicly accessible, the format is difficult to read and expensive. Pennsylvania is charging$ 6, 000 for the data, and Alabama is charging$ 37, 000, LeFevre said.
It is frequently presented in an illegible format that reads like lines of code. It’s cumbersome for any individual to decipher, and every state has a different format. The intention of Votermaps. This data should be cleaned up and made available for everyone to use for free on .org.
The Federalist’s Beth Brelje is a correspondent for elections. She is an award-winning investigative journalist with decades of media experience.