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NBC News: North Carolina elections at risk of chaos with Legislature’s proposed overhaul

โ€œHow do they get anything done? Are the important decisions going to be deadlocked? The consequences of that, as we are learning, could be devastating,โ€ said Bob Phillips, executive director of Common Cause North Carolina.

Early voting polling sites and schedules must be approved by the unanimous support of a county election board under current law, Phillips said. If a member of the county board objects, the state board must decide. If it cannot, he said, current law says the only early voting site would be the county board...

Associated Press: 6 charged in alleged straw donor scheme to help get Eric Adams elected New York City mayor

Susan Lerner, the executive director of the watchdog group Common Cause New York, said it was too soon to know if Adams had acted improperly. But she said the indictment was evidence that the cityโ€™s public financing system was working as intended.

โ€œThe campaign finance system we have in New York City deliberately makes it harder for people who want to buy influence,โ€ Lerner said. โ€œThe lesson here is do not try to game the system because you will be caught.โ€

Stateline: As states hunt for new voters, Massachusetts adds thousands via Medicaid applications

โ€œWe know there are folks engaging with these state agencies who otherwise arenโ€™t registered to vote, so this is a great way to ensure theyโ€™re getting on the voter rolls,โ€ said Geoff Foster, the executive director of Common Cause Massachusetts, which played a key role in getting the stateโ€™s Medicaid AVR system passed.

โ€œAVR was a huge win to address โ€ฆ the disconnect keeping a certain part of our population who are otherwise eligible to vote from getting on the voter rolls. And Medicaid recipients are certainly part...

Inside Sources/Tribune New Service/St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Op-Ed): ‘We the People’ must strengthen our democracy

The state of the republic is precarious. But I am hopeful that democracy will prevail because it is resilient.

We the people have faced serious threats in the past, including even the Civil War, and we have overcome them. We must continue to pass laws to strengthen our democracy in many states. In other states, we will not back down from defeating a new generation of Jim Crow laws crafted to keep targeted communities from the polls.

Public News Service: IN Voter Turnout Shows Disinterest in Elections, Politics

Julia Vaughn, executive director of the nonpartisan political watchdog group Common Cause Indiana, pointed to one indicator of a healthy democracy.

"Voter turnout is one of the ways that we judge whether or not you have a vibrant democracy," said Vaughn. "You know, are people participating? Do they want to come out and make their voices heard through the electoral process?"

Vaughn said it's more proof that concern is growing as the next presidential contest draws near.

"People have had a sense of...

States Newsroom: Red and blue state divide grows even wider in 2023โ€™s top voting and election laws

"Allowing New Yorkers to vote by mail increases voter turnout in harder to reach populations, including young people and voters of color," said Common Cause New York in a statement released the day the bill passed. โ€œ(N)ot only is this absolutely legal under our constitution, but the right thing to do."

Mercury News: Can Alameda County recover from botched elections?

โ€œThese things take time. You donโ€™t just earn the public trust overnight,โ€ said Pedro Hernandez, the Legal and Policy Director for California Common Cause, a voting rights and government transparency group. โ€œWe have to show the countyโ€™s voters that we are taking concerns seriously.โ€

In Hernandezโ€™s view, the buck must ultimately stop at the Board of Supervisors. An oversight commission may ultimately help bring light to concerns and potential election issues, but it does not have the authority to resolve those issues.

CBS News: A Delaware city is set to give corporations the right to vote in elections

"It was very shocking to see this attempt to have artificial entities have voting rights," said Claire Snyder-Hall, executive director of Common Cause Delaware, a watchdog group.

"We're seeing voter suppression all over the county, and this is the flipside," she added. "It's not saying the residents of Seaford can't vote, but it's diluting their votes by allowing nonresidents to vote."

Newsday: Hochul weighs Legislature’s plan for broader mail-in voting

"Allowing New Yorkers to vote by mail increases voter turnout in harder to reach populations, including young people and voters of color," said Susan Lerner of Common Cause-NY. "We know vote by mail works: New York did it successfully in 2020 when faced with the COVID-19 pandemic ... not only is this absolutely legal under our Constitution, but the right thing to do."

News Nation: Campaign finance rules blurred by super PAC backing DeSantis

โ€œWeโ€™ve seenโ€ฆcandidates really pushing the envelope here, and there has been a rise in single-candidate super PACs,โ€ said Stephen Spaulding, Vice President of Common Cause, a group dedicated to lessening the impact of special interests in government and politics.

โ€œYou have super PACs essentially operating as arms of campaigns โ€” only they can take unlimited amounts of money from nearly any source,โ€ Spaulding said.

โ€œItโ€™s time for Congress to step in and pass legislation to make clear that...

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