IVN is joined by Nate Allen, founder and Executive Director of Utah Approves, to discuss Approval Voting and his perspective on changing the incentives of our elections.
Podcast: Seeking approval in Utah


IVN is joined by Nate Allen, founder and Executive Director of Utah Approves, to discuss Approval Voting and his perspective on changing the incentives of our elections.

While we celebrate the Christmas season, hardworking Texans, who we all depend on to teach our children, respond to emergencies, and staff our hospitals, are fretting about where they will live when a recently passed housing bill takes effect in 2026.
Born out of a surge in NIMBY (“not in my backyard”) politics and fueled by a self-interested landlord lawmaker, HB21 threatens to deepen the state’s housing crisis by restricting housing options—targeting affordable developments and the families who depend on them.
The drastic changes in housing policy will have particularly devastating consequences for underserved communities across the state. Texas’s Latino community is a prime example. State data shows that a substantial portion of Texans who rely on income-restricted housing are Latino, and many of the neighborhoods where these developments are located are historically Latino areas already grappling with rising rents and stagnant wages.
In particular, a retroactive tax that is part of the law threatens to wipe out the affordability that has allowed these families to stay rooted in their communities, pushing them toward displacement at a scale not seen in years.
HB21 was pitched as a needed reform to deliver clarity and accountability to Texas’s affordable housing framework. The bill gained popularity among legislators, who bought into the narrative that it would close an alleged tax loophole for developers in the affordable housing space who partnered with government entities known as housing finance corporations (HFCs).
Yet in practice, HB21 reflects lawmakers' willingness to rush housing policy in response to political pressure rather than economic reality.
In places like San Antonio, El Paso, Houston, and the Rio Grande Valley, where affordable housing is already scarce, HB21 all but guarantees deeper housing insecurity, longer commutes for service-sector workers, and the erosion of cultural and economic anchors that have defined these communities for generations. Instead of expanding opportunity, HB21 effectively targets the very families who contribute so much to Texas’s workforce and cultural identity, making it harder for people to live where they work, raise their children, and build long-term wealth.
The bill was meant to overhaul the process through which affordable housing developers in qualify for tax exemptions from the state. But the legislation that passed went even further, applying retroactively to hundreds of completed affordable housing projects. That means buildings currently renting to working-class Texans at affordable rates stand to lose their tax exemptions and face huge bills that could force them to reconsider their ability to rent at those lower rates.
Thus, the law will destabilize public-private partnerships, deliberately unraveling of the very agreements that enabled the private sector to invest in affordable housing in the first place.
Developers are already warning that mass evictions and foreclosures could follow.
Even worse, the bill’s chief architect, Representative Gary Gates (R-28), has previously drawn scrutiny for potential conflicts of interest, as critics note that the restructuring of tax incentives and appraisal rules is likely to benefit his sprawling real estate portfolio directly.
Those effects justifiably raise serious concerns about whether HB21 was designed to serve Texans or to serve Gates. In fact, Rep. Gates recently set up an entity to serve as a front for his own properties and to intervene in a lawsuit challenging HB21 as unconstitutional. Critics argue that the maneuver is effectively an admission by Gates that his businesses will benefit from HB21 and would be hurt by the lawsuit challenging the law.
Housing advocates are fighting back to prevent HB21 from inflicting further damage. The Texas Workforce Housing Coalition recently filed suit, pointing out that HB21 is being used to retroactively strip tax exemptions from affordable housing projects that were legally established under prior law. The bill was set to go into full effect on Jan 1, 2027, but housing districts across the state are already stripping properties of previously granted approvals and exemptions.
For years, developers partnered with local housing finance corporations (HFCs) to produce units reserved for working families, relying on contractual tax exemptions that made these deals viable. HB21 requires rewriting these contracts after the fact, resulting in chaos: agreements are being questioned, financing structures disrupted, and long-term commitments disrupted.
Given the sweeping consequences HB21 is already producing, and the fact that tens of thousands of Texans stand to be affected, the Texas Legislature should immediately commission an independent, data-driven study examining the law’s economic, housing, and displacement impacts before they fully cascade across the state. Sound policymaking demands evidence, transparency, and deliberation, not rushed legislation that upends communities after the fact.
At the same time, the controversy surrounding HB21 underscores a deeper structural problem in Texas governance: the absence of an independent ethics commission with real enforcement authority. Texas lawmakers should move without delay to establish an ethics body empowered to investigate and sanction conflicts of interest, including cases like the one alleged against Rep. Gary Gates. Legislation that directly benefits—or even appears to benefit—a lawmaker’s private financial holdings erodes public trust. Without oversight and enforcement mechanisms, that erosion accelerates. Texans need politicians and policies that work for them, not against them.
The consequences of failing to uphold that standard are already clear. Texans have seen what happens when housing instability spreads unchecked: employers struggle to retain workers, schools lose students, and families who have invested years in their communities are pushed out. HB21 risks accelerating all of those harms. If Texas is serious about affordability, growth, and fairness, lawmakers must pause, study the damage, and act decisively. not just to fix a flawed housing law, but to reform the ethical safeguards that failed to prevent it.
Mario H. Lopez is the president of the Hispanic Leadership Fund, a public policy advocacy organization that promotes liberty, opportunity, and prosperity for all.
I’m an American who wants Puerto Rico to become America’s 51st state—and I want the entire country to be able to say “yes” at the ballot box. A national, good-faith, vote would not change the mechanics of admission; it would change the mood. It would turn a very important procedural step into a shared act of welcome—millions of Americans from all 50 states affirming to 3.2 million residents of Puerto Rico that they belong in full.
Across the map, commentators are already making that case. Georgia GOP chair Josh McKoon put it bluntly: “Unlike Canadians, Puerto Ricans actually want to become a state.” Jacksonville Journal-Courier
From Florida, Erika Benfield argues that supporting statehood is “not just fair—it’s now in the interest of Republican voters,” urging both parties to back it. Arizona’s Jaime Molera tells fellow conservatives, “In the recent election, Puerto Ricans made it explicitly clear that they are ready to vote for Republicans, and they are ready for statehood.” The Floridianazcapitoltimes.com
New York voices are in the mix, too. Writing in City Limits, veteran Tony Mele reminded readers that “in the past eight years, Puerto Rico residents have repeatedly voted against continuing under the current territory status.” City Limits
These writers aren’t debating legal fine print; they’re talking about dignity, clarity, and momentum. A national vote would spotlight facts, sweep aside myths (“they don’t pay taxes”) and let communities take down barriers and openly talk about culture and language. Most of all, it would give residents of Puerto Rico something priceless: proof that their fellow Americans chose them on purpose, not by default.
Critics like the Albuquerque Journal want Congress to slow down until every doubt is settled—the paper even warned that Senator Heinrich’s Puerto Rico statehood bill “could cost New Mexico one of its three U.S. House seats.” Heinrich’s Puerto Rican statehood bill could cost NM 1 of its 3 US House seats I want America to speed up how we settle those doubts: in public, together, with a Welcome Vote that replaces rumor with record and hesitation with a handshake.
So let’s pair congressional action with a public gesture on purpose. Call it a National Welcome Vote. Wrap it in a year of town halls, classroom lessons, service projects, and televised forums linking mainland communities with Puerto Rico. Then—ballot cast, message sent—move straight into the work of integration: tax alignment, full program parity, education systems that serve all Americans, infrastructure upgrades, and regulatory harmony. No more years of “should we have done this?”—just “let’s do this right.”
We say democracy is not a spectator sport. Let’s stop treating Puerto Rico’s future like a closed-door event. Congress can admit Puerto Rico. The rest of us can stand and cheer—in the clearest civic voice we have: a vote cast in hope. Let’s add a star—and let America say so.
Javier Ortiz has over 37 years of experience in technology, business, and the public sector, leads investment technical due diligence and innovation at Falcon Cyber Investments. www.falconcyber.com
In early September, the Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Commission released a 19-page strategy to improve children’s health and reverse the epidemic of chronic diseases. The document, a follow-up to MAHA’s first report in May, paints a dire picture of American children’s health: poor diets, toxic chemical exposures, chronic stress, and overmedicalization are some of the key drivers now affecting millions of young people.
Few would dispute that children should spend less time online, exercise more, and eat fewer ultra-processed foods. But child experts say that the strategy reduces a systemic crisis to personal action and fails to confront the structural inequities that shape which children can realistically adopt healthier behaviors. After all, in 2024, the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine updated Unequal Treatment, a report that clearly highlights the major drivers of health disparities.
Debbie Gross, a child psychiatric nurse and professor at Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, welcomes the administration’s stated focus on children’s health but notes the gap between ideas and implementation. “The ideas in it are good, but it’s all about how this is going to be executed,” she said in an interview with The Fulcrum. “The devil is in the details. The change this MAHA strategy seeks is at the community level. Who are the people you are bringing to the table?”
So far, the people sitting at the table endorse the ideological views of the U.S. Health and Human Service Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr—notably vaccine skepticism and regulatory rollbacks——rather than a cross-section of representatives from communities with the highest disease burdens.
The MAHA commission, created by President Trump in February 2025, is dominated by officials who toe the party line, from National Institutes for Health Director Jay Bhattacharya to Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, founder of the America First Policy Institute. This conservative think tank promotes a vision of America based on pronatalist, anti-immigration, and free speech policies. Gross hopes representation will broaden during implementation.
But experts warn that the administration’s rhetoric about improving children’s health often runs counter to its policy choices. In a press release that accompanied the report, Secretary Kennedy framed MAHA as a sweeping, cabinet-wide mobilization. “This strategy represents the most sweeping reform agenda in modern history,” he said. “We are ending the corporate capture of public health… and putting gold-standard science—not special interests—at the center of every decision.”
Yet the strategy largely sidesteps the social determinants of health, the conditions in which people live, work, and learn that drive health outcomes far more powerfully than personal choice. Speaking with The Fulcrum, Aviva Musicus, Science Director at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, notes that the report focuses heavily on individual responsibility while ignoring the systemic barriers that shape those daily decisions.
“Notably absent from the MAHA strategy report are strategies to address inequities and health disparities,” says Musicus. “The idea is that if we educate people, they will have the resources to take action and become healthier. The reality is that structures and systems affect our health far more than the individual decisions we make daily. Those individual decisions are a direct result of structures and systems. If you don't change the structure, you're not going to change overall health.”
Even where the MAHA strategy acknowledges environmental and behavioral harms—chemical pollutants, the role of technology—it proposes no corporate regulatory oversight. Deregulation only applies to what is perceived as government “interference.” Meanwhile, experts point out that many actions taken by the administration actively undermine the strategy’s stated goals, undermining some of the objectives laid out in the strategy. Cutting food assistance that low-income families rely on, loosening rules on pesticides linked to health risks and advancing policies that restrict access to nutritious foods.
“This administration's actions are making America hungrier and sicker,” says Musicus. “The negative impacts will be disproportionately felt by those with the lowest incomes. Stripping millions of Americans from their health insurance coverage and cutting SNAP will increase health inequities.”
The Administration’s recent decision to eliminate more than 3,800 research grants—totaling roughly $3 billion—for studies on cancer, health disparities, neuroscience, and other areas essential to children’s health further complicates MAHA’s ambitions.
In July, Gross wrote to Secretary Kennedy, urging the establishment of a dedicated agency for children within the NIH, analogous to the National Institute on Aging. She never received a response, despite the alignment with the administration’s stated priorities.
“We spend so much more money on adults than we do on children, but prevention in children costs a lot less,” says Gross. Many unhealthy behaviors, she noted, stem from corporate incentives that discourage improving food quality. “We've got a Secretary of Health who says we must prioritize healthy foods and children in schools. Meanwhile, we've got a Congress that wants to cut those programs financially. So, the question to Secretary Kennedy is how are you going to lead this in this environment?”
Gross also emphasized the essential role of nurses, often the frontline professionals, helping families build healthier lives. Yet the administration has moved to classify nursing as a non-professional degree, limiting financial support for students despite a national nursing shortage.
To meet the MAHA moment, Musicus says her organization is focusing on three priorities: holding leaders accountable for actions that undermine public health, mitigating the damage through litigation and by opposing key appointments, and articulating a proactive vision for an equitable food system. “It’s not enough to play defense,” she said. “We need to provide policymakers with an evidence-based roadmap for what true food system transformation would look like.”
The question is whether those in charge are willing to listen.
Beatrice Spadacini is a freelance journalist for the Fulcrum. Spadacini writes about social justice and public health.
This article explores practical, citizen‑driven strategies for reforming the Senate filibuster, breaking down how everyday people—not just lawmakers—can influence one of Congress’s most powerful procedural tools. It explains why the filibuster has become a barrier to passing widely supported legislation, outlines the mechanics behind reform efforts, and offers hands‑on actions that advocates, organizers, and community members can take to push for a more responsive and functional democracy. The piece frames filibuster reform not as an abstract procedural debate but as a concrete pathway to strengthen majority rule and expand democratic participation.
#1. Deep Dive - Reforming the filibuster
Sen. Jeff Merkley has waged a crusade to reform the Senate filibuster. Source: Los Angeles Times
Ever since co-founding FairVote, I’ve heard talk of reforming the U.S. Senate filibuster, from Action, Not Gridlock in a 1994 campaign spearheaded by Democrats to Donald Trump’s Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent writing in the Washington Post last month. In 2005, the Cato Institute’s David Boaz lifted up the pattern of flip-flopping on the issue, with the partisan minority typically embracing their power to block the majority, and the last 20 years have provided much more fodder for those reversals based on which party runs the Senate.
But here’s the thing: 51 votes should decide our most important statutory policy issues, just as they do in the U.S. House, nearly every state legislative chamber, nearly every international legislature, and nearly every use of initiative and referendum. The frustrated majority is correct that the American people lose faith in democracy when uncompromising partisan minorities deny action on mandates from an election.
That said, there's an equally strong case for embracing what the Senate can do well - create space for substantive debate, individual improvements to legislation, and true cross-partisan negotiation, learning, and compromise. Senate committees have a history of truly bipartisan development of legislation, allowing more votes on constructive amendments can improve bills, and slowing votes to hear from more voices can avoid mistakes in the spirit of Henry Fonda’s critical role on the jury in the classic movie 12 Angry Men.
I’m from a Quaker tradition, where decisions are made by consensus - a process of seeing unanimous support that depends on dialogue, listening, and recognition of when to step aside to allow an action you oppose. In formal Quaker deliberations and countless organizational and family meetings, I’ve seen how that process yields better outcomes than ramrodding through what the majority initially wants to do.
The Senate must make decisions, of course, and it isn’t going to work by consensus. But I would encourage Senate Democrats who have sought to end the filibuster to join with those in the Republican majority to reform the filibuster in a way that balances making final decisions with 51 votes with rules that encourage deliberation and enable improvements. Let’s start with what Scott Bessent wrote in the Washington Post:
The filibuster is not in the Constitution. The Framers envisioned debate, but they expected majority rule. The modern filibuster traces back to 1806, when the Senate, on the advice of then-former vice president Aaron Burr, deleted the “previous question” motion from its rulebook. That deletion wasn’t a philosophical embrace of unlimited debate; it was a housekeeping measure that inadvertently removed the chamber’s mechanism for cutting off debate by majority vote. Only later did senators discover they could exploit the gap to delay or block action.
In the modern era, merely threatening a filibuster typically forces a 60-vote supermajority to move legislation forward. Defenders of the filibuster argue that it ensures compromise, encourages bipartisanship, and protects minority rights. That may have been true decades ago, but it is no longer the case now. Today, the minority party can abuse the filibuster to the point of rendering the Senate almost useless as a deliberative body…
Though the filibuster no longer applies to judicial nominations, it still prevents the Senate from functioning as intended. Major legislation is now passed only through reconciliation, executive fiat or brinksmanship. The 60-vote threshold has become a convenient excuse for inaction. Both parties claim to defend “tradition.” But traditions are worth keeping only if they serve the country’s interests. The filibuster no longer does.
I agree, but let’s not make the Senate a body like the House, where the leaders of the partisan majority today are overly dominant. Those interested in filibuster reform should read the 2024 book Filibustered! by Oregon Senator Jeff Merkley and his former senior aide Mike Zamore, now with the ACLU. They artfully tell the story of the Senate's breakdown and are particularly thoughtful about reform. Zamore anticipated the book’s arguments in his 2022 Democracy Docket piece on the “talking filibuster. Here’s an excerpt:
We don’t need to touch the 60-vote threshold to cut off debate at all – we need to bring back the talking filibuster as a separate, alternative approach to finishing legislation… The path back for the Senate from today’s partisan gridlock is not to end debate by majority vote. Instead, it’s to restore the option of exhausting debate. By reinvigorating the talking filibuster and another 233-year-old rule limiting senators to two speeches on a given issue, the Senate can restore the balance that has been missing.
In other words, Senators could pass legislation with 51 votes, but only after allowing as many talking filibusters as the minority mustered under the revised rules - meaning the majority would have to prioritize what legislation to advance over a determined minority in transparent ways that would make both parties more accountable for their actions and renew opportunities for collaborative learning, compromise, and governing.
As we barrel toward the next government shutdown, where the Senate filibuster will again play a key role, this could be the time for a supermajority of Senators to come together to adopt new rules to make their body - our democracy - work as our founders intended.
#2. Spotlight - Civics as if we expected our children to be active citizens
Source: PBS
Protecting, expanding, and strengthening democracy requires work across all levels of government. It requires thinking and reinvention across electoral rules, communication tools, governing practices, and community-building initiatives. It requires efforts focused on the short-term, mid-term, and long-term. Any faltering in any of those dimensions will leave us short of where we need to be.
Investing in how we introduce young people and new citizens to our democracy is one of those long-term needs - and one that leaves far too many gaps. Carnegie Corporation recently released a detailed study, How Polarized Are We, which is well worth a read. One relevant finding stands out:
The data points to the potential of youth civics programming in reducing polarization across the country. When asked to evaluate the impact of a range of civics programming, respondents gave positive ratings to all seven. Topping the list: attending a local government meeting (87 percent), youth volunteering during elections (80 percent), and youth representation in local governance (80 percent). Despite the positive perceptions of these programs, the survey finds that less than half of local communities have such opportunities available.
That's not to say that groups aren’t doing important work. Founded by former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, ICivics does great work. I applaud efforts like the Model Convention 2026 that will bring together over a hundred students from universities to propose, debate, and vote on U.S. democracy reforms. Countless teachers, the largely "unsung heroes” of our democracy, go beyond what’s required to help their students think about their role in our democracy.
But what if we treated this collectively as an investment on par with John F. Kennedy’s 1961 call to put an American on the moon within the decade? At FairVote, I supported colleagues and interns lifting up a series of ideas that would be part of that investment. Here are a few of my favorite proposals:
Bring every student to the capital for hands-on learning mock legislatures: There are great programs focused on bringing students to their state capital or Washington, D.C. for presentations, mock legislatures, and observations of their legislative inaction. Rather than limiting that opportunity to a relative handful of students, some Scandinavian countries bring every student to the capital as part of months-long civic classes preparing students for their role in democracy.
Get every student registered to vote as they learn about democracy: FairVote was a leader in securing voter preregistration, which enables 16-year-olds to get on the voter rolls systematically when in school. Our bigger vision was to have systems in place so that every eligible voter is pre-registered as a government responsibility. Joining the movement for extending voting rights to 16-year-olds - already won in several cities and soon to be the law in the United Kingdom - would further a cohort of citizens voting at higher rates than those in their late teens and early 20s.
Have mock elections on what’s on the ballot - and try out different voting rules: More states and local school systems could ensure students get to vote on what’s on the ballot - and use actual voting machines and rules. As part of that learning, students could systematically explore different voting options and see how different election methods might affect their choices and representation.
Create a student seat on school boards - and let students vote on them: My home county of Montgomery County (MD) enables students in 6th through 12th grade to vote on a high school student to serve on the local school board. It also gives those student school board members the chance to vote on most of what the full board does.
There is no shortage of good ideas, of course. We instead have a shortage of government commitment and resources. Here’s to hoping for more leadership on this opportunity to strengthen democracy.
#3. Timely Links
Reforming the filibuster, hands-on civics, and timely links was first published on The Expand Democracy 3 and was republished with permission.
Rob Richie leads Expand Democracy. As head of FairVote, he created the partisan voting index, designed Alaska’s Top Four system, and advanced the Fair Representation Act, the National Popular Vote, automatic voter registration, and ranked-choice voting.