From Brett Maney <[email protected]>
Subject What the Olympics can teach us about politics
Date February 17, 2022 10:07 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
And you'll never guess -- more about Alaska
  <[link removed]>  
Hi Friend,

 

If you’re like me, you’ve been glued to the news surrounding the Olympic games
about the Russian figure skater who tested positive for banned substances. Her
situation in the games has had me thinking a lot about fairness.

 

I mean, imagine if the figure skaters or their coaches got to make the rules
themselves about who could participate and how. They’d rig the system to lessen
competition for themselves. Imagine if athletes from a single country got to
decide who the judges were that determined the winner for all of the athletes.
They’d choose their fellow countrymen who would tip the scales in their favor. 

 

It’s a ridiculous notion, and it would be massively unfair. Instead of the
best athletes in the world with the medals at the end, we’d end up with
sub-par, uninspiring victors. Of course, that’s not how the Olympics work. It
is, however, not unlike how the American political system works — or should I
say, doesn’t work?  

 

But let’s turn our attention back to the matter at hand: Here are three things
to think about this week.

Free speech wins, for now
<[link removed]>

In Texas, a federal judge has temporarily halted part of a new law that
prohibits officials from promoting voting at home as a method of voting, even
when voters match Texas’s criteria to do so.Citing freedom of speech
<[link removed]>
, the judge’s actions temporarily provide reprieve for some county clerks who
feel they have been prevented from providing answers and solutions to voters in
need of assistance. 

 

It’s a situation that we’re likely to see played out across the country, as
legislatures wrestle with addressing reasonable election security measures
amidst fraudulent and unfounded claims of voter fraud. Increasingly, election
administrators are facing the threat of serious criminal and civil charges for
performing their jobs, undercutting the integrity and security of our elections.

Are you part of this group?
<[link removed]>

Do you ever feel that the two major parties just don’t represent you?
Washington Post writer Matt Bai
<[link removed]>
wants you to know that you’re not alone. In an essay this week, Bai is adamant
in calling out both Republicans' “celebrity fan-club” inclination, as well as
Democrats’ chilling habit of controlling the limits and terms of debate. 


An exacerbating culprit of the extremism? Partisan primaries, which Bei calls
“antiquated” in their appeal to “an ever-winnowing group of fervent believers
in both parties.” Read hispiece here
<[link removed]>
.

Ladies and gentlemen, Alaska
<[link removed]>

<[link removed]>

Finally, a salve for your weary minds. From NYU Law professor Richard Pildes,
read why “More Places Should Do What Alaska Did to Its Elections
<[link removed]>
”. What did Alaska do, exactly? In 2020, they adopted Ballot Measure 2, to make
the system work for all voters. They created a single nonpartisan primary in
which every voter can vote and be heard. This ensures members of Congress have
to answer to all voters, not just a narrow subset. It also instituted the use
of ranked choice voting in the general election, so that instead of electing a
candidate who appeals to just a plurality of voters (i.e. not the majority of
all voters), Alaska will now elect a candidate who has the most broad appeal. 


As Pilde points out, it’s an adept way of ensuring that vocal minorities can’t
win by default, (what we at Unite America like to call thePrimary Problem
<[link removed]>) and as such, it
reduces the level of polarization and extremism in our politics. Alaska’s
election system shows other states the path forward to better representation
and more functional government.Check it out here
<[link removed]>
.

Brett
__
Brett Maney
Senior Communications Manager
Unite America
DONATE <[link removed]>


Want to stop receiving our weekly Three Things Thursday emails? Unsubscribe
<[link removed]>
 from Three Things Thursday, or Unsubscribe
<[link removed]>
from all Unite America communications.

Unite America | 1580 Lincoln St Suite #520 Denver, CO 80218
Paid for by Unite America.
Not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.
www.uniteamerica.org <[link removed]>


 
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis