Aktualisierung

Ausgewählter Artikel
Here’s the ad the Washington Post wouldn’t run

Artikel

Here’s the ad the Washington Post wouldn’t run

The Washington Post – which has a responsibility to hold a magnifying glass up to powerful people like Elon Musk and Donald Trump – refused to run our ad calling them out.​
Erhalten Sie nationale Updates

Erhalten Sie aktuelle Nachrichten, Aktionsmöglichkeiten und Ressourcen zur Demokratie.

*Indem Sie Ihre Telefonnummer angeben, erklären Sie sich damit einverstanden, mobile Benachrichtigungen von Common Cause unter der Nummer 95559 zu erhalten. Es fallen Nachrichten- und Datengebühren an.

Filter

1841 Results


Meet the Common Cause Women Protecting Your Freedom to Vote

Blogbeitrag

Meet the Common Cause Women Protecting Your Freedom to Vote

This Women’s History Month, we’re shining a light on three women here at Common Cause who are leading the charge to enact state-level Voting Rights Acts in Colorado, Florida, and Maryland.

Backdoor Budgets Are Bad For Our Democracy

Blogbeitrag

Backdoor Budgets Are Bad For Our Democracy

The troubling trend to pass stop-gap spending bills instead of an annual budget allows Congress to subvert transparency, hurting Americans.

Congress failed. Now it’s up to us.

Artikel

Congress failed. Now it’s up to us.

All week, we’ve heard from allies on Capitol Hill that their phones were ringing off the hook – and lawmakers on the fence felt enough heat that many switched their votes our way at the very last minute.

House Republicans’ Spending Plan is a Power Grab for Trump and Musk – Democrats Must Say No

Artikel

House Republicans’ Spending Plan is a Power Grab for Trump and Musk – Democrats Must Say No

Congressional Republicans' new continuing resolution (CR) would keep the government funded but at a dangerous cost, cutting key social programs while giving Donald Trump and Elon Musk unprecedented control over federal spending. Democrats in the Senate must stand up to this power grab.

How Voting Laws Have Changed Since the Supreme Court Weakened the Voting Rights Act

Artikel

How Voting Laws Have Changed Since the Supreme Court Weakened the Voting Rights Act

Ever since the Supreme Court gutted our Voting Rights Act, state politicians have taken advantage and passed laws that deny Black and brown voters their rights. The freshly reintroduced John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act can fix it.