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In this issue: Election law changes, online voting, and effects of the budget mess in Congress

The Fulcrum
January 27, 2022



TOP STORY

How the least populous states have overhauled their election systems

Ria Agarwal

This is the 10th in a series of articles examining changes to voting laws in every state.

The ongoing election evolution in the United States, while in large part catalyzed by the Covid-19 pandemic, has been building momentum for years.

Many states were already undergoing major overhauls to their election systems leading up to the 2020 election, even before the pandemic gripped the nation. And in the aftermath of the presidential contest, states have doubled down on voting reforms.

To provide a comprehensive analysis of the voting law changes in every state and Washington, D.C., since 2019, The Fulcrum compiled data from the Voting Rights Lab, the National Conference for State Legislatures, the Brennan Center for Justice, and state statutes and constitutions. This 10th installment focuses on the five least populous states.

There is little uniformity in the way these states addressed elections over the past three years. In Alaska, the focus was on primaries and ballot structure, while North Dakota, South Dakota and Vermont made extensive changes to their elections laws. In Wyoming, the focus was on voter identification.

Keep Reading...

DEBATE

Sabotaging democracy: The perils of online voting

Mark Ritchie

Despite what its advocates say, online voting is a dangerous idea that must be stopped, writes Mark Ritchie, a former Minnesota secretary of state who serves on the board of the U.S. Vote Foundation, and Susan Dziediszycka-Suinat, the foundation’s president and CEO.

PODCAST

Podcast: How the budget mess in Congress hurts all of us

Our Staff

This year the federal government is expected to collect more than $3.5 trillion in taxes— a vast amount of money by any measure. One of the key functions of Congress is to pass a budget. But often that seems close to impossible.

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Contributors

Reform in 2023: Leadership worth celebrating

Layla Zaidane

Two technology balancing acts

Dave Anderson

Reform in 2023: It’s time for the civil rights community to embrace independent voters

Jeremy Gruber

Congress’ fix to presidential votes lights the way for broader election reform

Kevin Johnson

Democrats and Republicans want the status quo, but we need to move Forward

Christine Todd Whitman

Reform in 2023: Building a beacon of hope in Boston

Henry Santana
Jerren Chang
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Changing pastimes

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Political blame game: Never let a good crisis go to waste

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Your Take: Bank failures, protection and regulation

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Videos

Video: The hidden stories in the U.S. Census

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Video: We asked conservatives at CPAC what woke means

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Video: DeSantis, 18 states to push back against Biden ESG agenda

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Video: A conversation with Tiahna Pantovich

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Video: What would happen if Trump was a third-party candidate in 2024?

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Video: How the Federal Reserve is the shadow branch of the government

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Podcast: A tricky dance

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Podcast: Kevin, Tucker and wokism, oh my!

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Podcast: Civic learning amid the culture wars

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