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In this issue: Time off for voting, an opportunity for democracy, and the costs of war

The Fulcrum
March 24, 2022



TOP STORY

Federal employees get time off to vote, staff polling locations

David Meyers

The central human resources agency for the federal government announced new rules on Thursday providing greater flexibility for government employees to vote and work as nonpartisan election staff.

Previously, federal employees were only granted administrative leave to vote on Election Day, with a few exceptions for early voting. But under new guidance issued by the Office of Personnel Management, federal employees will be able to vote during any time the polls are open for federal, state, local, tribal or territorial elections, including primaries, without losing pay.

In addition, the new guidance extends the leave options for federal employees who want to serve as nonpartisan poll workers or observers.

Keep reading...

DEBATE

There's opportunity amidst tragedy in Ukraine

Out of the carnage and horror of Ukraine’s stunningly brave attempt to preserve its democracy may come the opportunity to help us regain ours, writes Lawrence Goldstone, author of "On Account of Race: The Supreme Court, White Supremacy, and the Ravaging of African American Voting Rights."

PODCAST

Podcast: The terrible war

Our Staff

The post-9/11 “forever wars” — in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere — claimed a million lives and cost the United States $8 trillion over two decades. But what about the costs you can’t count?

Listen now

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Contributors

This rotation of the economic cycle feels different

David L. Nevins

What I tell my law students reversing Roe would mean for the rule of law

Matthew B. Lawrence

Gun violence is a chronic disease. Health professionals must help prevent it.

Robert Pearl

We are not helpless

Eric Liu

Why gun control laws don’t pass Congress, despite public support and repeated outrage over mass shootings

Monika L. McDermott
David R. Jones

Courting theocracy

Lawrence Goldstone
latest News

Can a gay, tough-on-crime prosecutor who supports abortion rights become California's 1st independent AG?

Shawn Griffiths
03 June

Podcast: Broken news

Our Staff
03 June

A choice ... and a risk

Lawrence Goldstone
03 June

Which states allow no-excuse absentee voting?

David Meyers
02 June

Podcast: Baby Boomers and American gerontocracy

Our Staff
02 June

Dining habits reflect Americans’ self-segregation

David Meyers
01 June
Videos

Video: Memorial Day 2022

Our Staff

Video: Helping loved ones divided by politics

Our Staff

Video: What happened in Virginia?

Our Staff

Video: Infrastructure past, present, and future

Our Staff

Video: Beyond the headlines SCOTUS 2021 - 2022

Our Staff

Video: Should we even have a debt limit

Our Staff
Podcasts

Podcast: Did economists move the Democrats to the right?

Our Staff
02 May

Podcast: The future of depolarization

Our Staff
11 February

Podcast: Sore losers are bad for democracy

Our Staff
20 January

Deconstructed Podcast from IVN

Our Staff
08 November 2021
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Can a gay, tough-on-crime prosecutor who supports abortion rights become California's 1st independent AG?

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A choice ... and a risk

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Which states allow no-excuse absentee voting?

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Podcast: Baby Boomers and American gerontocracy

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