read that wrong first go ...."The Honorable Member has been in so many panties he is a complete political harlot."

read that wrong first go ...."The Honorable Member has been in so many panties he is a complete political harlot."
You'll never guess which party has been trying to update and secure our election systems and which party has put the kibosh on all of it.JimC wrote: ↑Wed Nov 18, 2020 2:21 amYou have such a weird fucking system. We have a highly professional independent Electoral Commission that handles everything to do with voting at all levels. Parties appoint their own scrutineers, but they are purely observers, and I don't remember any protests from scrutineers or controversies whatsoever. You have an antiquated system that is creaking and showing its horse and buggy age...
https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-con ... use-bill/1For the People Act of 2019
This bill addresses voter access, election integrity, election security, political spending, and ethics for the three branches of government.
Specifically, the bill expands voter registration and voting access and limits removing voters from voter rolls.
The bill provides for states to establish independent, nonpartisan redistricting commissions.
The bill also sets forth provisions related to election security, including sharing intelligence information with state election officials, protecting the security of the voter rolls, supporting states in securing their election systems, developing a national strategy to protect the security and integrity of U.S. democratic institutions, establishing in the legislative branch the National Commission to Protect United States Democratic Institutions, and other provisions to improve the cybersecurity of election systems.
This bill addresses campaign spending, including by expanding the ban on foreign nationals contributing to or spending on elections; expanding disclosure rules pertaining to organizations spending money during elections, campaign advertisements, and online platforms; and revising disclaimer requirements for political advertising.
This bill establishes an alternative campaign funding system for certain federal offices. The system involves federal matching of small contributions for qualified candidates.
This bill sets forth provisions related to ethics in all three branches of government. Specifically, the bill requires a code of ethics for federal judges and justices, prohibits Members of the House from serving on the board of a for-profit entity, expands enforcement of regulations governing foreign agents, and establishes additional conflict-of-interest and ethics provisions for federal employees and the White House.
The bill also requires candidates for President and Vice President to submit 10 years of tax returns.
https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-con ... use-bill/4Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2019
This bill establishes new criteria for determining which states and political subdivisions must obtain preclearance before changes to voting practices in these areas may take effect. (Preclearance is the process of receiving preapproval from the Department of Justice or the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia before making legal changes that would affect voting rights.)
A state and all of its political subdivisions shall be subject to preclearance of voting practice changes for a 10-year period if (1) 15 or more voting rights violations occurred in the state during the previous 25 years; or (2) 10 or more violations occurred during the previous 25 years, at least one of which was committed by the state itself. A political subdivision as a separate unit shall also be subject to preclearance for a 10-year period if three or more voting rights violations occurred there during the previous 25 years.
A state or political subdivision that obtains a declaratory judgment that it has not used a voting practice to deny or abridge the right to vote shall be exempt from preclearance.
All jurisdictions must preclear changes to requirements for documentation to vote that make the requirements more stringent than federal requirements for voters who register by mail or state law.
The bill specifies practices jurisdictions meeting certain thresholds regarding racial minority groups, language minority groups, or minority groups on Indian land, must preclear before implementing. These practices include changes to methods of election, changes to jurisdiction boundaries, redistricting, changes to voting locations and opportunities, and changes to voter registration list maintenance.
The bill expands the circumstances under which (1) a court may retain the authority to preclear voting changes made by a state or political subdivision, or (2) the Department of Justice may assign election observers.
States and political subdivisions must notify the public of changes to voting practices.
The bill revises the circumstances under which a court must grant preliminary injunctive relief in a challenge to voting practices.
There's a lot of great stuff in those bills... national holiday for voting, automatic voter registration, independent commission to draw districts, a new voting rights act which is sorely needed after what Republicans have been doing since scotus gutted the old one, etc...Brian Peacock wrote: ↑Wed Nov 18, 2020 10:21 amI'd call that an attempt to ameliorate the legislative burdens placed on the systems by the other lot without addressing the underlying issues. Tinkering.
Well, the Republicans certainly aren't going to support it, so to pass it, the Dems would have to control the WH, both chambers of Congress, and get rid of the filibuster. Given how much the apportionment of senators and the Electoral college help the Republicans, yes, it is a steep hill to climb...JimC wrote: ↑Wed Nov 18, 2020 7:45 pmIt would certainly be an improvement, I can see that, but won't it attract the wrath of the "State's Rights" people? Part of your problems seem to be that every state has it's own idiosyncratic way of running elections, and won't want to be told how to do it by the feds...
Is there a chance in hell the measures could be actually achieved?
Excuse me! Don't insult cats!!!11!!!1!!
Yeahbut, we have instruction manuals.
Congress has the constitutional authority to legislate how our elections are run. The states would have to comply with federal laws.
Congress is made up of people and parties who have a vested interest in how the system operates at both the federal and state level, which is why you've ended up in the situation where one side or the other effectively attempts to wiggle into a position to coral the operation of democracy around their political interests. This is a dilemma for all democracies of course, and to balance it all parties to Democracy (voters and political operators, society) have to acknowledge some need for an electoral systems that operates independently of political imperatives and control.
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