From Alana Persson <[email protected]>
Subject Congress is great at kicking the can🥫
Date December 1, 2022 2:59 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.
Let’s leave booting it downfield to the World Cup



<[link removed]>



Hi Friend,



We hope you all had a safe and healthy Thanksgiving holiday. Here at Unite
America, we enjoyed a week away from our desks, allowing us to spend quality
time with friends and loved ones. Now, we’re back — rested and ready to hit the
ground running in the final sprint of the year. The midterm election might be
over (well … almost — we see you, Georgia!), but the work to advance election
reform continues. And, we’re not the only ones jumping straight into the
necessary work keeping our democracy functioning: so, too, is our Congress …
well, sort of.



Here are three things to consider this week:





Georgia taxpayers can save 75 million dollars in an instant (runoff)
<[link removed]>


As early voting kicks off this week for Georgia’s second high-profile Senate
runoff election in two years, “there's a growing movement afoot to get rid of
them
<[link removed]>
” altogether, writes Axios. Georgia law mandates that a candidate receive a
majority of the vote. If the threshold is not met in the general election (it
wasn’t this midterm), then the two top candidates must face off a second time
in a runoff. Thus, Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and Republican challenger
Herschel Walker are back on the campaign trail, making their final appeal to
voters ahead of theDecember 6th runoff
<[link removed]>
election.



Keeping this in mind, here’s what you should know ahead of Georgia’s runoff:

* More than 75 million taxpayer dollars
<[link removed]>
were spent on Georgia’s 2021 runoff elections.This is the second consecutive
year the Georgia U.S. Senate race has gone to a runoff, so considering the
combined cost of the 2021 and 2022 runoffs, you’re looking in the neighborhood
of 150 million taxpayer dollars!
* Ad dollars for the Georgia Senate runoff are expected to reach 125 million
<[link removed]>
!The amount of money pouring into Georgia’s runoff is downright gobsmacking,
especially considering it comes on top of the 200 million dollars in political
ads spent in the general election. Even before the runoff, Georgia ranked first
in the nation for the most expensive Senatorial race of 2022.
* Georgia shortened the gap between the general election and runoffs. Last
year, the Georgia legislature passed a voting law that, among other changes,
shortened the gap between the general election and runoff from nine weeks to 28
days — but runoffs still remain.
We know there’s a better way to produce majority winners AND simultaneously
save millions of dollars: it’s as simple as passing election reforms that make
instant runoff voting — popularly known as ranked choice voting — the go-to.
So, if this money-suck in Georgia wasn’t enough to convince you that there’s a
better way to conduct elections, check outour blog
<[link removed]>
underscoring why it’s time to give runoffs the boot.





<[link removed]>

<[link removed]>




Election reform in Alaska has passed its second test with flying colors
<[link removed]>


Thanksgiving Eve marked a historic moment for the election reform movement:
Alaska certified the results of its first general election using a top-four
nonpartisan primary and ranked choice voting general election system. The
outcome can be summed up as aresounding win for voters.



Alaska’s nonpartisan election system produced higher voter participation and
gave voters more choices on the ballot, as reflected in the results of the
House, Senate, and gubernatorial races. Let’s break down why this race was so
notable.

* A moderate Republican was re-elected to the U.S. Senate. After multiple
rounds of tabulation using the instant runoff system, Sen. Murkowski crossed
the required threshold of 50 percent of the vote because more than20,500
Democratic voters ranked her second on their ballots
<[link removed]>
.
* A conservative Republican was re-elected as Governor. Alaskans voted to
reelect Republican Governor Mike Dunleavey outright with more than 50% of votes
in the first round of tabulation, meaning that the gubernatorial race did not
go to ranked choice tabulation.
* A moderate Democrat was re-elected to the U.S. House. Congresswoman Mary
Peltola (D) held onto her seat, prevailing over Sarah Palin for a second time
this yearwith a much larger margin of votes
<[link removed]>
. (Peltola won in August during a Special Election race to fill the vacant seat
of former Rep. Don Young.)
The bottom line? It’s not the political parties that benefit from election
reform —it’s the voters who do. So, while this system is still in its nascent
stages,it’s already proved to be producing the sorts of representative outcomes
it’s encouraged to incentivize
<[link removed]>
. Hopefully, more states will follow in Alaska’s footsteps.


 


<[link removed]>

<[link removed]>
 




Congress is great at kicking the can
<[link removed]>


This week, lawmakers returned to Washington to address the final to-do list
before the holiday season recess. Needless to say, they (unsurprisingly)
haven’t made much progress. An updated government funding bill,which just so
happens to have a 16-day deadline
<[link removed]>
, is at the top of the agenda. A bipartisan full-year appropriations deal may
or may not be within reach. Partisan bickering may again result in Congress
“kicking the can down the road” to next year.



Sadly, annual stalemates around government spending have become a norm, almost
a new albeit awful American tradition. However, moments like these also remind
us why passing nonpartisan election reforms are crucial. If we wish to have
lawmakers incentivized to work side-by-side on important issues, such as
government spending, then we must change the way our elections are conducted to
foster a more functional government that better serves all voters.
 


<[link removed]>

<[link removed]>
 



Lastly, if you’re interested in helping advance the Voter’s First movement,
Unite America is acceptingapplications for a Partnership Director position
<[link removed]>. The candidate selected
to fill this role will engage in a diversified strategy to win reforms at all
levels of government with legislation, ballot measures, litigation, and
partners who believe in putting voters first.


Regards,



Alana
__
Alana Persson
Unite America

DONATE <[link removed]>





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

Unite America | 1580 Lincoln St Suite #520 Denver, CO 80203
Paid for by Unite America PAC INC.
Not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.
www.uniteamerica.org <[link removed]>
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis