Showing posts with label #Vote. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Vote. Show all posts

Thursday, October 28, 2021

Virginia’s vote-counters are ready for a tight race that could take days to resolve

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Recent polls have the high-stakes Virginia governor’s race as a neck-and-neck contest between Terry McAuliffe and Glenn Youngkin — and that means it could take days to determine the winner.

The vast majority of Virginia’s votes are expected to be counted on Election Day, and the state has made improvements to election laws earlier this year that will likely expedite the election night process — including some changes made, at least partially, to prevent conspiracy theories about the count from taking hold. But exceedingly close elections can take longer to resolve, including recounts. And in this case, Virginia law allows mail ballots postmarked by Election Day to be counted if they arrive by Nov. 5, three days later.

Former President Donald Trump and some of his supporters have already begun warning of voter fraud and laying the groundwork to question the veracity of Virginia’s elections after undermining faith in the 2020 results with a series of baseless claims. “The Virginia governor’s election — you better watch it,” Trump said in an interview with John Fredericks, a popular conservative radio host in the state, in September. “You have a close race in Virginia, but it’s not close if they cheat.”

Other states soon took center stage after Election Day 2020, but Virginia’s vote-counting was another prime example of how bad actors can sow disinformation by taking advantage of the general public’s unfamiliarity with election procedures. The Associated Press called the state for President Joe Biden about a half-hour after polls closed. At the time only 10 percent of the vote was reported in, and Trump was still leading in the early raw vote count. That lead in the incomplete count persisted for hours, which conspiracy theorists used to claim the state was stolen from Trump.

In reality, Biden won the state by a huge margin. Trump’s fleeting lead was due to a combination of Republican-leaning areas reporting results earlier than Democratic-dominated counties, as the AP noted in its explainer of its call, and Democrats disproportionately voting via mail ballots, which were generally reported later in the evening.

Some new changes should make the process even smoother and more clear in Virginia. A law passed earlier this year requires that in-person early voting and mail ballots be reported separately, after previously being reported in one big tranche, which election officials say will improve the process.

“That separation allows for a couple of different things: It means that people will know where the votes came from,” said Brenda Cabrera, the director of elections for the city of Fairfax and the president of the Voter Registrars Association of Virginia. “Dividing it up also allows us to get those results in faster.”

The new law also requires jurisdictions to begin preprocessing mail ballots no later than a week before the election. A lack of preprocessing of mail ballots is what made the mail ballot count — which was heavily Democratic in 2020 after Trump’s attacks on mail voting — take so long in states like Pennsylvania last year.

Scott Konopasek, the new general registrar of Fairfax County, said “it’s going to look like a wildly different night” in his county this year than in years past. Fairfax County, which is separate from the city of Fairfax, is a Democratic bastion notorious among election observers for its late reporting.

“Right at seven o’clock, or right shortly after seven o’clock, I’ll be reporting the absentee portion,” Konopasek said, noting that those numbers have historically been one of the last things in the evening. He said he anticipates early in-person voting results to come in within an hour of polls closing, and numbers from Election Day precincts should start rolling in around 8 p.m.

“The big giant bite of ballots that has, in the past, mysteriously shown up at the end is going to start out at the kickoff this time,” Konopasek said. He noted it was a jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction decision, and others will not have the same reporting timeframe that he does.

Loudoun County general registrar Judy Brown, for example, wrote in an email she anticipated that her jurisdiction would report “early voting numbers first followed by election day votes followed by mail ballots,” allowing for the possibility that mail ballots are reported in the same window as Election Day votes. She wrote that her expectation for when the county’s results are mostly reported would be no later than 9 p.m., two hours after polls close, “if all goes well.”

But if the election is extremely close, it could be a wait until Friday to find out the winner. The state allows ballots that are postmarked by the U.S. Postal Service no later than Election Day and received by noon on Friday to count.

Those late-arriving ballots “will be reported once the central absentee precinct meets again after the noon deadline on Friday” said Allison Robbins, the chief elections officer of Wise County, which is on the southwestern tip of the state.

That number was small in 2020, the first year where mail balloting was available to all Virginians, coming in at about 10,000 votes out of the nearly 4.5 million who cast a ballot last year.

Election officials are urging voters to have patience as results come in. Cabrera of Fairfax City noted that “anything reported on election night is unofficial,” and it has always been that way. She said that officials go through “a series of checks and balances” to make sure official results are accurate. Election officers noted that corrections to vote totals are routine. They all also expressed confidence in running a good election in a week.

“We’re not a top-down process in Virginia. It’s local officials in the 133 jurisdictions who manage and administer elections,” said Robbins, a former past president of the state’s local election officials association. “I’m very confident in Virginia’s processes and am extremely proud of the work that our local people do.”

A recount is also possible, if the margin between the two candidates is within 1 percentage point. A petition for a recount can be made by the trailing candidate within 10 days following statewide certification of the election, which is on Nov. 15. If the race is within half a point, the state picks up the cost, and if it is larger than that the trailing candidate pays for it.

Even still, there is a window of opportunity for bad actors to take advantage of the vote count, and parts of MAGA-world beyond Trump have already started to spread those conspiracy theories.

One America News Network, the far-right cable network favored by the former president, ran a segment over the weekend urging conservatives to volunteer in Virginia to guard against supposed fraud. “Are there enough Republican volunteers to make sure there’s no midnight ballot drop?” Christina Bobb, the OAN host who has been one of the chief proponents pushing for partisan election reviews across the country, said in the segment captured by the liberal watchdog Media Matters. “Are there enough volunteers bold enough to ask questions of suspicious people doing suspicious things?”

Virginia state Sen. Amanda Chase, who proudly dubs herself “Trump in heels,” is on the vanguard of Republicans who falsely say the 2020 election was stolen from Trump.

Youngkin, the Republican nominee, has not repeated those sentiments. After winning the nomination, he has said he believes Biden was legitimately elected, something he did not say directly during the primary. Youngkin said during the first gubernatorial debate that Virginia would “have a clear, fair election,” and both he and McAuliffe pledged to accept the results.

Democrats charge Youngkin is trying to have it both ways, on everything from prioritizing “election integrity” efforts during the primary and calling for audits of election machines, to accepting Trump’s support and campaigning with Chase. Youngkin, in turn, has called on McAuliffe to apologize for claiming the 2000 election was “stolen” following the Bush v. Gore Supreme Court decision, and for saying on the stump that Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams would be the governor of her state if not for voter disenfranchisement that “took the votes away.”

Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2021/10/28/virginia-vote-count-governors-race-517401
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Zach Montellaro



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Thursday, October 21, 2021

Texas Lt. Gov’s $1MM bounty pays off by catching a Republican who voted twice

Lt. Governor Dan Patrick put up $1,000,000 of his campaign donor’s money to catch voter fraud in Texas. It took a while but they finally caught someone, a Republican, of course.

Vice:

Shortly after the 2020 election, Texas lieutenant governor Dan Patrick offered up to $1 million in reward money, to be paid out of his own campaign coffers, to “incentivize, encourage and reward people to come forward and report voter fraud.”

Read the rest

Source: https://boingboing.net/2021/10/21/texas-lt-govs-1mm-bounty-pays-off-by-catching-a-republican-who-voted-twice.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=texas-lt-govs-1mm-bounty-pays-off-by-catching-a-republican-who-voted-twice
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Jason Weisberger



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Monday, October 18, 2021

Senate to vote on sweeping voting rights bill Republicans promise to filibuster

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The vote, which is likely to take place Wednesday, might be the last dance for federal voting rights legislation.

Source: https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/senate-vote-sweeping-voting-rights-bill-republicans-promise-filibuster-n1281651
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Sahil Kapur



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Friday, October 8, 2021

84 percent of Trump voters are worried about discrimination against whites: poll

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A large majority of people who voted for former President Trump say they are concerned about anti-white discrimination in the United States, according to a new poll from the University of Virginia and Project Home Fire …

Source: https://thehill.com/homenews/news/575899-84-percent-of-trump-voters-are-worried-about-discrimination-against-whites-poll
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Maureen Breslin



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Saturday, August 28, 2021

Thousands expected in Washington, D.C., to march for voting rights

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Thousands are expected in Washington, D.C., on Saturday to mobilize for voting rights as Congress and several states consider laws that could change ballot access.

Source: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/thousands-expected-washington-dc-march-voting-rights-rcna1786
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Natalia Abrahams



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Tuesday, August 17, 2021

House Democrats introduce John Lewis voting rights bill

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The John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act – one the most highly touted Democratic priorities this session – was introduced Tuesday, with the expectation that it will pass through the House when the lower chamber reconv…

Source: https://thehill.com/homenews/house/568223-house-democrats-introduce-john-lewis-voting-rights-bill
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Marty Johnson



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Thursday, August 12, 2021

Census Bureau data out today will shape the redistricting fight of this decade

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Of concern is a 2019 decision that gives lawmakers clearance to manipulate districts for political purposes

Happy Thursday,

Continue reading…

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/aug/12/census-bureau-data-redistricting-fight-to-vote
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Sam Levine in New York



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Tuesday, August 10, 2021

AOC rallies Texas Democrats in voting effort on hour-long Zoom

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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) praised and offered to reach out to any flagging Democratic Texas state lawmakers during an hour-long Zoom meeting Monday afternoon, two lawmakers who participated told Axios.

Why it matters: The Texans have been holed up in Washington for weeks to prevent Republicans back home from gaining the minimum number of lawmakers needed to pass legislation. The stalling tactic has helped keep voting rights in the national spotlight, Ocasio-Cortez told them.


  • AOC told a couple dozen state lawmakers on the call that if they gave her names and numbers, she would personally call their colleagues to urge them to continue preventing a quorum back in Austin.
  • Over the weekend, a district judge signed a temporary restraining order blocking their arrests should they return home. Some Democrats have since returned to Texas, which has frustrated others remaining in Washington, the Texas Tribune reported.
  • Ocasio-Cortez also said she would ask Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) about bringing federal voting rights bills to the floor for a vote, Texas state Rep. Ronald Reynolds told Axios.

What they’re saying: “She encouraged us to continue to break quorum,” Reynolds said. “She was very supportive in terms of giving ideas on strategy and in terms of how we can keep those who have grown a little weary.”

  • “It’s a marathon, it’s not a sprint,” Texas state Rep. Penny Morales Shaw told Axios. “But when we hear, for example, from AOC today — it’s an infusion. It’s an infusion of hope.”
  • A spokesperson for Ocasio-Cortez did not respond to a request for comment.

The big picture: AOC has remained a powerful figure on the Hill since staging an upset primary win in 2018, and both state lawmakers expressed hope their meeting would spark more attention to their cause.

  • “If our members hear from other stakeholders or other elected officials — especially congressional elected officials — how important this is, then that helps,” Morales Shaw said.
  • Just last week, AOC joined her colleague Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) in protesting on the Capitol steps over the expiration of an eviction moratorium put in place because of the pandemic. The Biden administration ultimately reinstated it.
  • The Dallas Morning News first reported that Texas Democrats were hopeful for a meeting with AOC.

Source: https://www.axios.com/aoc-texas-democrat-voting-right-protest-quorum-1737180e-b7d9-4eff-a97a-f47e02833c0f.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Stef W. Kight



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Friday, August 6, 2021

It’s Never Been Easier to Call Your Senators and Demand Climate Action

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This weekend, the Senate will vote on the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill, which officials unveiled this week. The bill includes new spending for climate measures like electric vehicle charging stations and public transit. But compared to what’s needed to take on the climate crisis, it’s a drop in the…

Read more…

Source: https://gizmodo.com/it-s-never-been-easier-to-call-your-senators-and-demand-1847431940
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Dharna Noor



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Friday, July 23, 2021

Rep. Hank Johnson among demonstrators arrested at voting rights protest

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Rep. Hank Johnson (D-Ga.) was arrested on Thursday, along with other demonstrators, at a voting rights protest outside the Capitol.Johnson was arrested outside the Hart Senate Office building whi…

Source: https://thehill.com/homenews/house/564483-rep-hank-johnson-among-demonstrators-arrested-at-voting-rights-protest
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Lexi Lonas



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Tuesday, June 22, 2021

The pandemic changed how we vote. These states are making the changes permanent.

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The Covid-19 pandemic is receding in America. But some of the changes it prompted in American elections are here to stay.

A handful of states are locking in voting-rights expansions that they piloted in 2020, extending early voting and absentee balloting programs even as other states add restrictions to voting.

Two states that switched during the pandemic to universal mail voting — mailing ballots to all active registered voters in each election — will now continue that practice permanently, for at least general elections: Nevada and Vermont. Several other states are moving to allow no-excuse mail voting permanently, after allowing it temporarily while Covid-19 raged in 2020.

And while many of the state-level expansions of voting programs are happening in blue states, some red states have made changes as well. Kentucky, where Republicans have legislative supermajorities and former President Donald Trump won the presidential contest by 25 points in 2020, codified in-person early voting for the first time this year.

The move came after voters embraced an emergency version of the program during the pandemic — and it bucks a trend that has seen some red states throw up more voting restrictions in 2021, in the wake of Trump’s defeat.

“We’re the only Republican state, the only conservative state, the only red state — however you want to put it — certainly the only state with a Republican Legislature that has made voting easier this year,” said Kentucky Secretary of State Michael Adams, a Republican. “I’m really proud of that.”

Altogether, the changes mean that millions more Americans will receive mail ballots in future elections, and the number could balloon even more if backers in California successfully switch the state to a universal mail voting system. In total, seven states will now have largely mail-based election systems with the two newest additions joining Colorado, Hawaii, Oregon, Utah and Washington.

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“The reason we did it is because during the pandemic we made the change — obviously, from the safety and the health viewpoint and whatnot — and it worked,” Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak, a Democrat, said in an interview. The bill, which passed on party lines, will send ballots to voters for general and primary elections, unless they opt out.

The Kentucky law, which the GOP-controlled Legislature passed with bipartisan support before Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear signed it, adds three days of in-person early voting in the state and allows for counties to establish “voting centers” — where any voters can go to vote, instead of having to vote at a single local precinct — among other changes.

Kentucky voters still need an excuse to vote by mail, which will keep mail absentee voting rates low. Other Republican-controlled states that already offered early in-person voting have also made modest expansions to the practice, too. Soon after Adams’ interview, Louisiana — which like Kentucky has a Republican-controlled Legislature and a Democratic governor — passed a law adding more early voting days for presidential elections. Earlier this year, Oklahoma and Indiana both tacked on an additional day of early voting in some situations, while Georgia’s controversial elections law included a provision that will lead to more early-voting opportunities in smaller counties, matching what larger counties already offered.

“A bipartisan approach to election reform is best, because it gets you — I think — number one, a better product. And number two, it’s a better look,” Adams said. “People are going to be suspicious when the other side is writing the election rules and trying to force them through on a party-line vote,” Adams continued, citing efforts by some state Republicans as well as federal Democrats.

Federal Democrats’ broad elections and ethics bill, the “For the People Act,” is likely to fail a procedural vote in the Senate on Tuesday.

California could be the next state to make major voting changes, after every active registered voter in the state was mailed a ballot during the 2020 election due to the pandemic. After temporarily expanding mail elections through this year, which would include the effort to recall Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, lawmakers are driving to make the changes permanent. “We’re already moving in this direction and have the processes in place,” said Democratic Assemblymember Marc Berman, who is leading the push. (California counties can already opt into mailing all voters a ballot.)

Much of the rest of the movement is coming in the Northeast. The biggest shift came in Vermont, which will now send all active, registered voters mail ballots for general elections. Republican Gov. Phil Scott even urged lawmakers to go further and extend the policy to primaries and local elections when he signed the bill.

“I’m signing this bill because I believe making sure voting is easy and accessible, and increasing voter participation, is important,” Scott said in a statement when he signed the bill. “Having said that, we should not limit this expansion of access to general elections alone, which already have the highest voter turnout.”

Outside of Vermont, there is a broader drive in the Northeast to allow voters to cast ballots by mail without needing an excuse, after most states temporarily allowed for as much during the pandemic.

No-excuse absentee voting has been in broad use in the West, Midwest and along the country’s Southeastern coast. But liberal governors and legislators in the Northeast have lagged behind, even as federal Democrats have agitated for changes.

New Yorkers will vote in November on a constitutional amendment that would effectively allow for no-excuse absentee voting in the state, after the state functionally allowed for it during the 2020 elections. A second amendment vote in front of voters will allow for same-day voter registration. The process to get both amendments on the ballot began in 2019, before the pandemic.

Connecticut also kicked off a process this year for a constitutional amendment on no-excuse mail voting, with both chambers passing a resolution for the first time. But because it failed to get supermajority support in the state House, after most Republicans there voted against it, the Legislature will have to pass the resolution again during their 2023 session to put it on the ballot in 2024.

Massachusetts is also moving ahead toward having mail voting for all its voters after adopting it during the pandemic. The state House tacked an eleventh-hour provision on to a supplemental budget that would permanently extend mail voting in the state, and there is a separate constitutional amendment being considered that would allow for no-excuse absentee voting. Republican Gov. Charlie Baker has previously voiced support for allowing any voter to request a mail ballot.

Two other Northeastern states also currently don’t have no-excuse absentee voting: New Hampshire and Delaware. New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, a Republican, vetoed Democratic-led efforts in 2020 to turn the state into a no-excuse state, and Republicans flipped both of the state legislative chambers in 2020. New Hampshire Secretary of State Bill Gardner, a Democrat who often clashes with the rest of his party on voting rights, also opposes no-excuse mail voting.

And Delaware has also hit a significant roadblock. After the Democratic-controlled state Legislature passed a measure in 2019 setting up for a constitutional amendment that would clear the path for it, the effort sputtered this year after Republicans who previously backed it changed their minds. (A two-thirds majority is needed, which Democrats do not have on their own.)

“It already had bipartisan support — overwhelming bipartisan support, really,” said Morgan Keller of the Delaware ACLU. “Now, all of a sudden, it’s changed because of the national narrative.”

Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2021/06/22/pandemic-voting-changes-495411
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Zach Montellaro



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Saturday, June 19, 2021

Schumer to force vote Tuesday on sweeping election bill

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Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) will force a vote Tuesday on a sweeping bill to overhaul federal elections.Schumer informed his caucus of the schedule during a closed-door meeting on Thursday, a Sen…

Source: https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/559002-schumer-to-force-vote-tuesday-on-sweeping-election-bill
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Jordain Carney



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Wednesday, May 5, 2021

Cuomo signs legislation restoring voting rights to felons upon release from prison

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New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) signed legislation Tuesday night that would restore voting rights to formerly convicted felons upon their release from prison. …

Source: https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/551923-cuomo-signs-legislation-restoring-voting-rights-to-felons-upon-release
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Jordan Williams



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Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Governor signs Voting Rights Act of Virginia

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Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D) signed into law Wednesday a measure that fills some of the gaps in voter protections created nearly a decade ago when the Supreme Court gutted federal voting rights oversight.A key p…

Source: https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/545801-governor-signs-voting-rights-act-of-virginia
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The Article Was Written/Published By: John Kruzel



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Monday, March 1, 2021

Census data snafu upends 2022 elections

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A six-month delay holding up the data that states use to draw their legislative districts is mangling plans for the 2022 elections, as states discuss postponing primaries and navigating legal deadlines for redistricting that some are now almost certain to miss.

The Census Bureau announced in mid-February that redistricting data — the granular, block-level population counts that are used to draw equal-population political boundaries for state legislatures and the House of Representatives — would be released by Sept. 30 this year, well past the usual delivery date of March 31.

Many states are typically done with redistricting by then, not just starting it, and the delay puts states with early primaries and redistricting deadlines in a difficult position. At least nine states have constitutional or statutory deadlines to redraw their maps, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, that won’t mesh with such a profound delay in the data delivery. Election officials in some states, such as North Carolina, have recommended moving back early primary dates to make more time for drawing new districts. And both political parties will have to grapple with how to recruit candidates to run for districts that may not exist until just before election season begins.

“Basically we’re sort of panicking, and we’re not really sure what we’re going to do,” said Jessika Shipley, the staff director of the Colorado’s state redistricting commission. “We don’t have the option of just waiting and doing this for the 2024 cycle.”

The time crunch will hit every state, but it’s particularly acute in states like Colorado with hard deadlines. Colorado’s state constitution requires new congressional maps to be drawn by Sept. 1. The commission is not fully formed yet, but Shipley said her staff is considering its options, including proposing legislation or turning to the state judiciary for a delay. “The other option is, I guess, to wait and get sued because we don’t meet our deadlines, and see what court weighs in at that point,” she said.

In a late February call with reporters, the National Republican Redistricting Trust, the GOP’s hub for data and legal efforts on redistricting, expressed concern that the delay could spur a cascade of litigation and force courts to take a significantly bigger role in the redistricting process.

“I am concerned that it’s going to increase the volume of litigation,” said Jason Torchinsky, an attorney with the NRRT who gamed out potential scenarios stemming from the census delays, including a proliferation of court-drawn interim maps. “So we could wind up with a series of court-drawn maps around the country for 2022, only to have legislatures reconvene to draw new maps for 2024.”

Even the broadest redistricting data from the Census Bureau — apportionment data, the topline population counts that determine how many House seats each state gets — won’t be released until the second half of April. These numbers, which were originally slated for release in December 2020, are most crucial to states that are on the cusp of losing or gaining a seat — and to the members of Congress in those states, who could suddenly find themselves standing without a chair when the music stops. The latest estimates show New York and Alabama battling for the last slot.

A few states have already taken action to give themselves more leeway, and they could serve as potential blueprints for their peers. California’s constitution requires that maps be drawn by Aug. 15, but the state legislature had already sought and received a four-month extension from the state Supreme Court — and it may require another. Other legislatures are also considering asking the judiciary for relief.

“We’re working with the attorney general’s office to see what options we may have,” said Maine state Senate President Troy Jackson, whose state has a June deadline for the legislature to draw maps. “We might have to go to the Maine Supreme Court to see if we could get an extension. The original delay was concerning, really concerning. But this one is obviously a real problem.”

“I think the court’s going to be sympathetic, if that’s the route we end up going, because they won’t be able to draw any maps without having any knowledge, either,” he continued. “Our constitution never took into account what we’re dealing with here.”

Another tactic adopted by Ohio last week was to file a suit in federal court that would compel the Census Bureau to release redistricting data on March 31 as legally required, arguing that the Bureau has unilaterally changed the deadlines codified in law and was harming the state. Ohio has a constitutional deadline to finalize its new maps in September.

Voters in New Jersey, which holds legislative elections in odd-numbered years, approved a state constitutional amendment in 2020 that pushes legislative redistricting back due to the delay, so the 2021 elections will be held on the old maps.

The six-month delay will have a downstream effect that will likely hold up candidate filing deadlines and primaries around the country. Illinois, Texas and North Carolina, which are likely to have March primaries and late 2021 candidate-filing deadlines, are in the biggest squeeze. And with Illinois on track to lose a seat, North Carolina gaining one and Texas slated to gain as many as three, all maps will change significantly, too.

“Keep in mind the logistics of this: This is not just the deadlines for drawing the maps,” Torchinsky said. “You also have to work backwards from the date of the election to allow time for both qualifying, through whatever the state processes are, plus allowing normal time for election administration like ballot printing.”

In North Carolina, Karen Brinson Bell, the executive director of the state board of elections, told a State House committee last week that her staff is recommending that the state’s primaries be pushed to May 3. Any change in the state’s election calendar would have to be approved by the state legislature.

And in Pennsylvania, legislative leaders have already floated the need to delay the state’s 2022 primaries, which are currently scheduled for mid-May.

“It is possible that the six-month delay could cause the final legislative plans to be completed well into the second quarter of 2022,” Brent McClintock, the executive director of the Pennsylvania Legislative Data Processing Center, a nonpartisan agency that assists the state legislature, said at a hearing last week.

Uncertain schedules for primaries and filing deadlines put candidates in a particularly uncomfortable situation. They will go months without actually knowing the lines of the districts they want to run in — a headache lawmakers in Pennsylvania know well.

In 2018, the state Supreme Court invalidated Pennsylvania’s congressional map, calling it an illegal partisan gerrymander. It didn’t impose a new map until February 2018, about three months before the primaries.

“When I ran my first time, we didn’t really know where the districts were. We ended up running several different races,” said second-term Rep. Chrissy Houlahan (D-Pa.). “We ended up doing petitions in two different districts. We ended up not knowing where to campaign. It’s really hard.”

In general, that dynamic could benefit incumbents in 2022, given that sitting lawmakers typically have sizable campaign accounts and a built-out staff. Challengers, meanwhile, may be reluctant to launch campaigns knowing that districts might change in ways that make them unwinnable or draw their communities into a different seat.

The compressed timeline will also make it harder for objectors to challenge new maps, either in court or by marshaling public opinion.

The National Democratic Redistricting Committee, led by former Attorney General Eric Holder, has been working for years to get voters more invested in blocking partisan gerrymanders so they can publicly pressure lawmakers into creating what they call “fair districts.”

In Florida, some Democrats are working to ensure a short redistricting timeline doesn’t interfere with their state-mandated process of gathering public input on the new maps proposed by lawmakers in Tallahassee.

“Making sure that the public engagement piece is there to react to what the legislature proposes to do is just as important,” said Florida state Rep. Ben Diamond, who is helping with Democratic redistricting efforts in the state.

Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2021/03/01/census-data-elections-471882
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Zach Montellaro and Ally Mutnick



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Friday, February 19, 2021

Iowa GOP advances bills to shorten early voting, restrict absentee ballots

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Republicans in Iowa are advancing bills that would shorten early voting and restrict absentee ballots. Committees in the Iowa state House and Senate ap…

Source: https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/539625-iowa-gop-advances-bills-to-shorten-early-voting-and-restrict-absentee
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Jordan Williams



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Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Nearly 140,000 voters left GOP in 25 states in January

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Nearly 140,000 voters left the Republican Party in 25 states in January, according to an analysis of public voting records obtained by The Hill.Some of the steepest drops in Republican Party affiliation were seen i…

Source: https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/538199-nearly-140000-voters-left-gop-in-25-states-in-january
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Tal Axelrod



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Dozens of states see new voter suppression proposals after baseless fraud claims

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There are at least 165 proposals under consideration in 33 states so far this year to restrict future voting access by limiting mail-in ballots, implementing new voter ID requirements and slashing registration options.

Driving the news: As former President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial begins over his role in the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection that sought to overturn President Biden’s victory — fueled by baseless allegations of voter fraud — lawmakers in states with GOP majorities are pushing new ballot obstacles based on similar baseless allegations.


Why it matters: The 2020 election shattered minority turnout expectations, with Black and Asian-American voters in Georgia, and Latino and Navajo voters in Arizona, flipping traditionally red states to blue.

  • Advocates hoped that one silver lining of COVID-19 would be a permanent expansion of absentee and early voting options and other steps to make voting safer and more accessible to all voters.
  • Democrats in state legislatures are proposing bills to expand access to voting.
  • At the same time, a majority of states are seeing a proliferation of efforts to make voting more difficult. Trump’s false claims of election fraud are fueling some of the arguments for these proposed obstacles.

The details: Three states at the tip of the spear are Arizona, Pennsylvania, and Georgia — states critical to Trump’s loss in November and Democrats’ takeover of the U.S. Senate last month. According to the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law, Arizona leads the pack with 19 proposals, followed by Pennsylvania with 14 and Georgia with 11.

  • A South Carolina proposal would impose a signature matching requirement for absentee ballots.
  • A New Hampshire bill would allow anyone to observe polls “without obstruction.”
  • A Texas plan would strip voter registration authority from county clerks and require the Department of Public Safety to verify the citizenship of voters.

What they’re saying: Arizona Republican state Rep. Kevin Payne is seeking to abolish the state’s so-called permanent early voting list and require mail ballots to be notarized. “People don’t feel confident about the signature verification,” he said.

  • Arizona state Rep. Athena Salman, a Democrat, said Republicans are “trying to stop eligible voters from voting because they don’t like the decisions voters are making.”
  • One state official in Georgia, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said many of the bills are “grandstanding with the knowledge that cooler heads will prevail.”
  • The ACLU is expanding resources to its southern affiliates in anticipating of fights over voting rights. Executive director Anthony D. Romero told Axios the restrictions largely represent an effort “to exclude minority and people of color voters from the polls.”

Source: https://www.axios.com/state-voter-suppression-proposals-5ee31df3-8e98-4bf5-8910-7bc6db704f15.html
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Russell Contreras



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Tuesday, February 9, 2021

‘Jim Crow relic’: Senate filibuster stands in way of Democratic voting rights push

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Analysis: calls to scrap the requirement for 60 senators to back legislation are growing as Congress weighs sweeping protections

As states around the country advance a wave of measures that would make it harder to vote, Democrats in Washington are planning the most sweeping voting rights protections in decades. But to pass those protections, Democrats will have to overcome a huge barrier.

Related: Fight to vote: civil rights are making a comeback at the DoJ – here’s why

Continue reading…

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/09/senate-filibuster-voting-rights-democrats
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The Article Was Written/Published By: Sam Levine in New York



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Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Vermont elections chief pushing to make universal ballot mailing permanent

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The top elections official in Vermont said Wednesday he is working to make universal ballot mailing permanent after the state used mail voting last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.Officials mailed ballots to ever…

Source: https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/537166-vermont-elections-chief-pushing-to-make-universal-ballot-mailing
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The Article Was Written/Published By: John Bowden



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