Hi Friend,
It is a PACKED week at Unite America — and for all of America, it seems. In DC, Congress is furiously debating key budget bills, while state houses grapple with new and pending legislative redistricting maps. Here at Unite America, we’re eagerly working on a very exciting video project that I can’t tell you too much about yet… so instead, let’s just get into it.
Here are three things to think about this week. Will we be saying aloha to RCV? Hawaii may be hundreds of miles away from mainland US, but that hasn’t kept them from catching the spark of reform. Over the last few years, reformers in Hawaii have been working diligently to put voters first, adopting vote at home statewide in 2019, and using ranked choice voting in their presidential primaries last year. Now, they may be the next state to adopt ranked choice voting statewide.
Our elections are being messed with In the aftermath of the Big Lie of the 2020 election, state legislators across the country have been attempting to insert themselves into our election process, giving themselves more power, and opening up the door for election subversion. In a new analysis, our friends at Voting Rights Lab found more than 180 bills that had been introduced across the country that have attempted to shift power away from election administrators — opening up the possibility of election interference by disgruntled partisan elected officials.
How to create an election system that represents all New Yorkers Finally, how do you create an election system that truly represents all voters? This week, former New York Democratic mayoral candidate Andrew Yang writes an appeal for nonpartisan primaries. In a city like New York — a solidly Democratic stronghold — the only election that matters is effectively the Democratic primary. Whoever wins the primary will almost certainly win the general election. Republican and independent voters are left out. Instead of having a vote that matters in a race that matters, they’re left to wait for the general election. Instead of being able to add their voice, and get a candidate who might represent them as well, their voices are forced into a false binary, meaning that their opinions are all too often left behind. What does Yang suggest instead? It might sound familiar:
“Instead of having closed party primaries that leave a lot of people out in the cold," Yang writes, "important elections like the mayoral election should have an open primary — with all candidates — and then have the five finalists compete via ranked-choice voting in the general election.” Want to stop receiving our weekly Three Things Thursday emails? Unsubscribe from Three Things Thursday, or Unsubscribe from all Unite America communications.
|