Voters in one Los Angeles district could win $25,000 if they cast ballots in an upcoming school board election. But is that a “winning idea”?
The so-called “votería” is part of an initiative from the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project in California to boost voter turnout at local elections, which have been at an “all-time low,” according to Mario Solis-Marich, the spokesperson for the organization behind the votería.
“It’s an important election for the future,” Solis-Marich told José Díaz-Balart on msnbc Wednesday, “not only for the kids in Los Angeles, but throughout the country because of the economic impact that Los Angeles has. 11% of people usually participate in this election. [The votería] may bring [that number] up.”
But the votería is not without criticism. An LA TImes editorial recently questioned the initiative’s “integrity of the democratic process,” which Solis-Marich responded: “This is not a bribe. This is a contest.”








