As the country heads towards the 2024 general elections, encouraging voter registration will need to be combined with solid education to turn first-time voters into 'super voters'. | ZintleMahlati
As the country heads towards the 2024 general elections, encouraging voter registration will need to be combined with solid education to turn first-time voters into"super voters".
This is the advice of Nsé Ufot, the CEO of the American civic engagement organisation New Georgia Project, which successfully registered more than 500 000 voters who were previously left out of the voting system in Georgia. The New Georgia Project was a non-partisan organisation which solely focused on ensuring people votes and not influencing who they voted for, Ufot told News24. Get 14 days free to read all our investigative and in-depth journalism. Thereafter you will be billed R75 per month. You can cancel anytime and if you cancel within 14 days you won't be billed.
South Africa Latest News, South Africa Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
NATASHA MARRIAN: Power plays for metros on the road to 2024How the ANC is gearing up to retain Gauteng in the next polls, writes NatashaMarrian.
Read more »
NATASHA MARRIAN: Power plays for metros on the road to 2024How the ANC is gearing up to retain Gauteng in the next polls, writes NatashaMarrian.
Read more »
PETER BRUCE: Why Mpho Phalatse should hang in thereYou can be certain that whatever slight progress mayor Mpho Phalatse had been making in our economic hub, it will now end, writes Bruceps.
Read more »
PETER BRUCE: Why Mpho Phalatse should hang in thereAfter 2024 or 2029, the ANC will be unable to form a government on its own — and that’s where the big test lies for the DA, writes Bruceps.
Read more »
PETER BRUCE: Why Mpho Phalatse should hang in thereThe key question left unanswered by the fracas in Joburg, though, is how it affects the DA, by some distance still the second-largest party in the country, writes Bruceps.
Read more »
Ghana: Current Account Deficit to Widen to 5.8 Percent in 2022Ghana's current account deficit is set to widen to 5.8 per cent this year, before narrowing slightly to 5.2 per cent in 2024.
Read more »