The DNC has pledged $20 milliion dollars for a community-based voter registration drive -- they and the Obama campaign plan to register millions of new voters between now and November, the largest voter registration drive since the 1960s. It's a departure for Democratic presidential campaigns: The '08 effort is seeking to blend the best aspects of community organizing, with established, nuts-and-bolts voter outreach tactics. That's the good news.

But there are questions about whether the system can absorb millions of new voters and Voting Integrity experts are worried. We learned during the primary that the system can't digest high traffic. Will a paperwork blizzard overwhelm clerks, will registration forms be processed? Will the voters dodge purges? Be accepted at the polling places -- and when they cast their vote, will it be counted - as cast? As our panel notes the Republican Party knows that you need to shape the electorate by complicating the process. And they'll be sure to take advantage of what many are predicting will be massive turnout.

Here to discuss how you can make sure your vote is counted are Steve Rosenfeld, Senior Fellow at Alternet.org and the author of Count My Vote, A citizen’s Guide to Voting which has launched a campaign for zealous monitoring of voting rights going into the 2008 elections; Joe Richey, electoral activist & researcher from Boulder, CO; Scott Rafferty, a lawyer who sued the Veterns Administration in 2004 when the agency blocked voter registration efforts by Democrats at its campus in Menlo Park, California, but allowed the Republican Party onto the campus to register voters; and Mimi Kennedy, actress/activist, co-chair of Progressive Democrats of America.