Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Follow Us:
Top Stories

Seven crucial things to remember as we look back at the election

People in line outside a building that has a sign that reads "General election"

Voters in Baltimore, Md. enter a polling place on Tuesday.

J. Countess/Getty Images

Edwards, a Democrat from Maryland, and Wamp, a Republican from Tennessee, previously served in the House of Representatives and now are co-chairs of Issue One’s National Council on Election Integrity.

At the heart of American democracy is a shared principle that has guided our nation for nearly 250 years: The people decide. Elections don’t just happen in a vacuum every two or four years. They are a collective effort requiring all of us to participate and be engaged citizens — as voters, poll workers and election officials alike.

Our elections empower every eligible voter to have a say in who will govern our republic and the policies that will shape our future. No matter your political beliefs, elections remind us that every voice matters. Take it from us — a liberal Democrat from Maryland and a conservative Republican from Tennessee who certainly don’t agree on many issues — civility and trust in the democratic process are hallmarks of self-government.


As we look back on Election Day 2024, here are seven important virtues we should all agree to in the coming weeks, months and years so our democracy remains strong and a beacon of freedom.

1. Elections are a shared responsibility

Democracy is not merely a form of government. It’s a partnership; it’s a verb. It’s what we do together as citizens — voters, elected officials and candidates, poll workers — to reinforce and uphold the truth that here in America, leaders are chosen by the people. Every vote helps shape and maintain a system where all people can influence decisions, not just the most powerful. We all have to participate and fulfill our role in the democratic process.

2. Bipartisan teams Ensure Integrity and Accuracy

Elections work a little differently depending on where you live, but all states take steps to ensure the integrity of the voting process. Teams of people, including Republicans and Democrats, work together at every step of the voting process to verify voter eligibility, prepare ballots and other materials, and serve as independent observers. This collaboration is essential to ensure that every vote is counted fairly and accurately, especially in closely contested races where recounts may be necessary. Mistakes and technical issues may occur during the election process, but they are caught quickly and do not significantly impact the election outcome.

3. Trusted Technology, Trained Professionals

Before any ballots are cast, the machines that count our votes are tested rigorously for accuracy and security. Every state must do this. Similarly, every jurisdiction has safety checks and “chain of custody” procedures to document the location and status of ballots and voting equipment so that all elements of the election system are accounted for. The protective measures don’t stop there. Every election in every jurisdiction is administered by a team of trained professionals working together and setting partisan preferences aside to ensure that processes run smoothly and that every vote is secure and counted accurately. Voters can trust these public servants to do their jobs with integrity and unfailing patriotism.

4. Americans Stationed Overseas Can Safely Vote

Overseas voters, including members of our military and their families, deserve to have their votes counted here at home. Uniformed servicemembers know better than most that American elections give ordinary citizens a voice that many people around the world don’t have. Any allegation to suggest that military voting is open to fraud is unequivocally false. Ballots cast by overseas voters are subject to the same rigorous security checks that protect all of our elections, and it is crucial that their voices are heard.

5. Verification Is Key

Before results are certified, they undergo thorough verification for accuracy. Even if a news outlet projects a winner on election night, those reports are based on partial counts or estimations of results. Nothing is final until results are certified by election officials. These officials may conduct audits to prove that votes were counted accurately and, in the case of an extremely close race, officials may recount every vote to confirm accuracy and resolve any errors. This can take time, but the public should rest assured that final results are indeed correct. Once officials can lawfully attest that the election results are a true account of all votes cast, the outcome can be officially declared and certified.

6. Attacks on Election Officials are Attacks on America

It’s important to remember that our elections are run and administered by ordinary people — they may be your neighbors, friends and family members. These public servants are committed to keeping our elections free, fair and secure. They keep our democracy running. It’s our patriotic duty to make our voices heard — and we can support our brave election workers when we exercise this freedom. Any threat or attack against the public servants who keep our elections free and fair undermines our democracy. It is simply un-American. These dedicated professionals are vital to ensuring fair elections, and they deserve our support and respect.

7. Patience is a Virtue

In a perfect world, we’d all go to bed on election night knowing who our next president will be. But we know that’s not how it works now. In our fast-paced world, it’s essential to prioritize accuracy over speed. A little patience can provide peace of mind that the results we receive are legitimate, and that any challenges to election outcomes are based on proof and adherence to the rule of law.

As we reflect upon the elections of 2024, we must remember that the strength of our democracy lies not only in its institutions, but in the hands of every one of us. For all elections in the future we must all commit to preserving our sacred experiment by supporting the election workers who keep our elections free and fair, exercising patience as results are verified and affirming that every eligible vote will be counted. In doing so, we can carry forward the torch of freedom and continue the work of building a more perfect union.


Read More

Capitol Building.

An in-depth examination of the erosion of checks and balances in the United States, exploring Project 2025, executive overreach, and the growing strain on constitutional democracy—and the critical role of citizens in preserving it.

Getty Images, Rudy Sulgan

The Mirror Has Cracked: How the Three Branches Failed America

James Madison warned that the government would always mirror human nature — its virtues and its flaws. “What is government itself,” he asked, “but the greatest of all reflections on human nature?” The United States was built on a radical promise: a participatory government “of the people, by the people, for the people.” Today, that mirror is cracking in real time. What once reflected a nation striving toward freedom and equality now reflects something far more chaotic — a government drifting from its constitutional purpose and reshaped by loyalty tests, political revenge, and a blueprint designed to consolidate power.

In 2026, that reflection is unmistakable: a government shaped not by three independent branches, but by a president’s loyalists and a coordinated plan to remake American democracy from the inside out. The framers built guardrails — separation of powers, checks and balances, and independent institutions — to prevent the rise of authoritarian rule. Yet the country now faces a blueprint, Project 2025, that overrides those protections by placing independent agencies under presidential control, replacing civil servants with loyalists, and weaponizing the Department of Justice. This is not drift. It is design. And it has left the nation with a government that no longer reflects the people but instead reflects the ambitions of those who seek power without accountability.

Keep ReadingShow less
Independents and Republicans May Hold the Power in Los Angeles – If They Actually Vote
Image: Jamie Phamon Alamy. Image licensed obtained and used by IVN Editor Shawn Griffiths

Independents and Republicans May Hold the Power in Los Angeles – If They Actually Vote

Los Angeles voters are heading into a June 2 primary that may settle far more than who advances to November.

Under the Los Angeles City Charter, any candidate who clears 50% of the primary vote wins outright. No runoff. No November election. That rule turns the June primary into the only election in several of the city's most closely watched contests.

Keep ReadingShow less
The Hidden Infrastructure of Democracy: Professionalizing and Diversifying Election Staff

Dr. Shaniqua Williams, assistant professor of political science

The Hidden Infrastructure of Democracy: Professionalizing and Diversifying Election Staff

Earlier this year, the Bridge Alliance and the National Academy of Public Administration launched the Fellows for Democracy and Public Service Initiative to strengthen the country's civic foundations. This fellowship unites the Academy’s distinguished experts with the Bridge Alliance’s cross‑sector ecosystem to elevate distributed leadership throughout the democracy reform landscape. Instead of relying on traditional, top‑down models, the program builds leadership ecosystems—spaces where people share expertise, prioritize collaboration, and use public‑facing storytelling to renew trust in democratic institutions. Each fellow grounds their work in one of six core sectors essential to a thriving democratic republic.

Below is an interview with Dr. Shaniqua Williams, Assistant Professor at West Virginia University. Her research focuses on state politics, race and ethnicity, Black political behavior, Black women’s descriptive and substantive representation, and election administration. She is also a Research Fellow with the Center for Election Innovation and Research, where her work focuses on election administration, workforce development, infrastructure, and policy.

Keep ReadingShow less
Democracy Isn’t Eroding. It’s Evolving. The Question Is: Toward What?
a group of flags

Democracy Isn’t Eroding. It’s Evolving. The Question Is: Toward What?

I fell in love with democracy before I fully understood it.

In high school civics classes in the 1990s, I learned about a system that was imperfect in its origins but evolving toward something better. I believed in that evolution. I believed that democracy, if nurtured, could become more inclusive than the one it started as.

Keep ReadingShow less