Tech Entrepreneurs from India are
Empowering US Voters 
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Hyderabad,India.Nov,
2008:
Shukoor Ahmed
ran for a
seat in the Maryland House of Delegates in
1998, after coming to America a decade earlier
from Hyderabad, India. Campaigning
door-to-door, he was surprised so many voters
did not know who represented them! After his
race ended slightly short of victory, he took
advantage of his Master’s degree in Computer
Technology and Political Science to build
StateDemocracy.org,
a website he launched in 2001 to connect
citizens and lawmakers. His website’s motto
encapsulated its mission: “Delivering
Democracy to Your Desktop!”.
Frank Islam similarly
came to America to study, earning B.S. and
M.S. Degrees in Computer Science. He too
became a citizen and eventually founded
QSS, Inc., a technology firm he recently
sold to Perot Systems for $250 million.
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He won numerous awards for
leadership and established a personal foundation
supporting educational, cultural and artistic
causes worldwide.
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Last month, Shukoor
Ahmed handed over to Frank Islam the gavel as
the new Chairman of the StateDemocracy
Foundation, the nonprofit operator of the
StateDemocracy.org
website. Over its seven years, nearly 500,000
people have visited
StateDemocracy.org.
It remains the only 1-Stop portal where
Americans living anywhere can
connect
with all their state and federal lawmakers.
Earlier this year, the
Foundation launched another website,
LobbyDelegates.com,
that enabled rank-and-file Democrats to lobby
“Super Delegates” -- the 800 top party
officials who held the deciding votes in the
very close Presidential primary between Barack
Obama and Hillary Clinton. Some 30,000 users
lobbied Super Delegates to support their
preferred candidate via this one-of-a-kind
service, before Obama was finally nominated on
August 28. |
The
StateDemocracy.org
portal is now playing a key role in empowering
voters to participate in America’s dramatic
General Elections on November 4. It offers
citizens free online access to: (1) voter
registration, (2) absentee ballots and (3) a
polling place locator. These tools all work for
any jurisdiction in the nation. The site also
offers widgets that can be installed on other
civic websites for use by their visitors. Even
facebook.com
offers these tools for its users to add to their
own Profile page, to facilitate voting
among their visiting friends.
As he
takes charge amid America’s historic election, Mr.
Islam has embraced the opportunity to give back to
his adopted nation by using Internet technology to
expand civic engagement. He noted that in October
alone, users of
StateDemocracy.org
doubled compared to the previous nine months,
largely due to demand for absentee ballots -- yet
another sign of the record-breaking U.S. voter
turnout expected this year.
Mr. Islam hopes to use
the entrepreneurial skills that brought him so
much business success to similarly boost the
Foundation to its next level. His goals as
Chairman include recruitment to diversify the
Board’s expertise, methodical strategic planning,
greater grant funding and expanded partnerships
with kindred organizations.
Shukoor Ahmed, who will remain on the
Foundation’s Board, was recognized last month
for the web technology firm he founded,
V-Empower, Inc. It was named as the 7th
fastest growing technology firm in the Washington,
DC area last year. V-Empower builds
websites for political candidates and
organizations in the U.S., and increasingly in
other nations as well.
Not
one to forget his homeland, Mr. Ahmed also created
a similar website for citizens in India --
IndiaDemocracy.org
- which has attracted nearly 50,000 users since it
was launched in December 2002. It remains India’s
only civic networking portal, empowering users to
contact their lawmakers, as well as share news,
photos, videos and blogs about politics in India.
Both
of these sons of India can claim to be carrying on
the legacy to the wider world of renowned Indian
mathematician Aryabhatta, who is credited with
inventing the concept of “zero” -- the very
foundation for all computer programming. So, it
is fitting that two natives of India, the world’s
largest democracy, are dedicated to using the
power of technology to strengthen civic
participation in the world’s oldest democracy, the
United States of America!
Reachout's News Bureau