A medida que se acerca rápidamente la elección primaria municipal, hay un impulso urgente para más educación electoral en Pensilvania. Más de 8,7 millones de votantes de Pensilvania podrían participar en las primarias municipales locales el 16 de mayo. En la Liga de Mujeres Votantes de Pensilvania, la Directora Ejecutiva Meghan Pierce dice que cada boleta se verá un poco diferente, dependiendo de dónde viva. Por lo tanto, la Liga alienta a las personas a investigar un poco antes de emitir su voto, para determinar cómo estas contiendas podrían afectar sus vidas.
"Si tiene o no un hijo en la escuela, probablemente le importe cómo se financia su sistema de educación escolar pública. Si tiene muchos baches en su calle y quiere saber por qué, tal vez investigue qué está pasando con su ayuntamiento. En Filadelfia, por ejemplo, va a haber una carrera por la alcaldía: elecciones muy activas, con muchos candidatos postulados," explicó Pierce.
Ella agrega que Pensilvania no tiene registro de votantes el mismo día: debe registrarse antes de la fecha límite estricta del 1 de mayo para votar en las primarias. El último día para solicitar una boleta por correo o en ausencia es el 9 de mayo.
También con la Liga de Mujeres Votantes, Rochelle Kaplan comenta que lo importante en esta boleta es todo lo que enfrentan los residentes de Pensilvania en el día a día. Esto se debe a que los cargos locales están en juego, desde el consejo municipal y los comisionados del condado hasta los jueces locales y los miembros de la junta escolar. Kaplan argumenta que las primarias municipales son tan importantes como las elecciones generales, pero en las últimas, en 2021, la mayoría de la gente no votó.
"La participación electoral para la general rondaba el 30%. Para las primarias, solo el 20%. Eso significa que dos de cada 10 personas en las primarias eligen a las personas que irán a las elecciones generales, y luego solo tres de cada 10 eligen a las personas que van a dirigir su municipio, su junta escolar, quien va a ser su alcalde," analizó Kaplan
Kaplan promociona el sitio web de la Liga Vote411.org como una ventanilla única para obtener información electoral. Cualquiera puede verificar el estado de su registro de votante, encontrar su lugar de votación o solicitar una boleta por correo. Al ingresar una dirección postal, también pueden ver una guía de las carreras específicas en su boleta, junto con la información del candidato.
El apoyo para este informe fue proporcionado por The Carnegie Corporation de Nueva York.
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A new report showed turnover among California chief election officials reached 57% in 2022, a record high. It then declined this year to 40%.
Researchers at the University of California-Los Angeles partnered with the Bipartisan Policy Center to analyze the data from 18,000 jurisdictions nationwide.
Rachel Orey, senior associate director of the Elections Project for the Bipartisan Policy Center, said the jobs of election workers have become significantly harder in recent years.
"Today, election officials must manage everything from cybersecurity risks posed by foreign adversaries to people who are doubting the outcome of elections, to information technology, legal disputes, political pressures," Orey outlined.
The turnover rate is defined as the percentage of jurisdictions in a state where the chief local election official changed within the prior four years. It has been an issue in California for decades. The turnover rate stood at 41% back in 2004. But things got much worse after 2020, when election officials became targets of threats and harassment, often spurred by former President Donald Trump's evidence-free claims about a rigged election.
Orey noted she expects this year's presidential election to go smoothly, because dozens of states, including California, have done a lot to "beef up" the elections workforce.
"Sixty-five percent of local election officials have experience running a presidential election," Orey pointed out. "Where there are new officials, we find that they have an average of eight years of experience in an election office. So all in all, we see that election officials are well-prepared to administer the 2024 presidential election."
The report recommended better funding for elections offices, higher salaries and more training in order to attract and retain a highly skilled election workforce.
Support for this reporting was provided by The Carnegie Corporation of New York.
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North Dakota's June 11 primary is inching closer and those running for legislative seats are trying to win over voters, including Native American candidates who are part of a movement energized by newly drawn political boundaries.
The organization North Dakota Native Vote said there are seven candidates with Indigenous roots seeking spots in the Legislature. Most are running in District 9, which was recently updated to reflect representation needs for two Native American tribes.
Natasha Gourd, a board member of North Dakota Native Vote, described them as a good mixture of candidates coming from both reservations in the area, with some running as Democrats and others as Republicans.
"We've seen an upturn in participation and just getting leadership development through Native candidates," Gourd observed.
The election wave comes after the state saw 10 Native candidates in legislative races two years ago. For her group, Gourd acknowledged the boost can be tricky because they cannot endorse everyone running. But she noted having greater assurances the areas will be represented by people from their community -- no matter if they have a different stance on certain issues -- is still a positive.
Gourd added trying to build on the momentum is also important for off-reservation districts.
"What they do at the state level, regardless of Native American people in North Dakota (being part of) federally recognized tribes, it does affect us," Gourd pointed out. "Most Natives in North Dakota do live off the reservation, so it does affect our populations."
Gourd stressed they need more Native voices at the state level speaking out about priorities within education, the housing crisis, energy issues and health care. She hopes the positive trends they're seeing inspire more civic participation among other racial and ethnic groups trying to get a seat at the policy table in North Dakota.
Disclosure: North Dakota Native Vote contributes to our fund for reporting on Civic Engagement, Housing/Homelessness, Livable Wages/Working Families, and Native American Issues. If you would like to help support news in the public interest,
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A new poll finds a near 20-year low in the number of voters who say they have a high interest in the 2024 election, with a majority saying they hold negative views of both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump. A group of Arizona elections officials and experts recently gathered to discuss the growing discontent with the state's current electoral landscape.
Stephen Richer, Maricopa County Recorder, said that if politicians are what he calls "single-minded seekers of re-election," he contends the state should change the political incentive structure.
"And if those incentives will change, then maybe we will be talking about more things in the Arizona Voter's Agenda and less things that are currently right now incentivized by what I still believe to be a minority, but a very passionate, very loud, and a minority that is definitely committed to acting on those issues," he said.
Richer added it is important to remember that despite Independent and unaffiliated voters being able to participate in the July 30th statewide primary, they were excluded from the state's March Presidential Preference Election, and that has caught the eye of some in the state. The bipartisan group Make Elections Fair Arizona is pushing for open primaries, but proponents of closed primaries believe they're crucial to maintaining the integrity of party ideals.
Amanda Burke, executive vice president with the non-partisan, nonprofit organization Center for the Future of Arizona, said more than half of unaffiliated voters do not feel they have leaders or candidates running who speak to the issues and causes they care about. She contends that then translates to who decides to show up at the ballot box and vote, and encourages Arizonans to imagine a different primary system if they want different outcomes.
"Otherwise we are going to continue to have some more outcomes in terms of people who are incentivized to speak to a small percentage of their base on either side who are really not representative of the larger views," she explained.
The Grand Canyon State allows voter-initiated amendments to the state constitution, but the Arizona Require Partisan Primary Elections Amendment would add the state's current primary practice to the state constitution, prohibiting future changes without another constitutional amendment. Make Elections Fair Arizona is still collecting signatures to get its measure on the November ballot.
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