Archive for 2011
Stop the Presses: Election News is What Happens While You Were Making Other Plans
This morning’s election headlines suggest that election geeks across the nation should enjoy their holidays because 2012 already looks to be more interesting and eventful than any of us might have expected.
Read MorePew's Latest Dispatch: Removing Voters from the Rolls
Pew’s latest Election Data Dispatch uses EAC data to look at how and why voters are removed from the rolls – and suggests that better data practices might capture more of the 40% of voters removed for “failure to vote”.
Read MoreSan Francisco and Ranked Choice Voting: New Data is Asking, Not Answering Questions
A new review of ranked choice voting in San Francisco’s 2011 election suggests that as many as two-thirds of the city’s voters didn’t complete their ballots. Some believe this is the definitive answer on RCV – but I think the study asks other questions we should answer first.
Read MoreKeeping Up With the Parties (and Voters): The Need for Voter Registration Modernization
Recently the RNC announced that it would follow the lead of Democrats and outsource its voter file management in order to get the benefits of new information obtained in the field. This post suggests election officials follow suit and points to a Pew initiative to do just that.
Read MoreWe Are Legion. Expect Us: Anonymous Targets Iowa Caucuses
International hacker group Anonymous’ threat to “peacefully shut down” the Iowa caucuses is a sign of the promise and perils of technology – and a reminder that professionals who can meet and resist threats are a necessity as progress comes to the field of elections.
Read MoreAPPRECIATION: Texas' Ann McGeehan elects to seek new challenges
After nearly a quarter of a century, a long-time elections official moves on.
Read MoreVoter ID and Democracy's Neighborhood
An editorial in the Wausau (WI) Daily Herald puts a new, neighborly spin on the voter ID debate.
Read MoreAAUGH! South Carolina GOP Funding Decision Scrambles Counties' Primary Plans
South Carolina’s GOP announced that they will not be contributing to the cost of the state’s January 21 – and blamed counties for filing (and ultimately losing) a lawsuit that would have forced them to do so. The state now has about five weeks to make up the difference.
Read MoreNYTimes Piece on DMVs and Rethinking Government: Lessons for Election Administration?
A recent NYTimes piece on customer service at the DMV and its impact on public attitudes toward government is too good to pass up for a similar riff on elections.
Read MoreForgotten But Not Yet Gone: Is This the End of the EAC?
New developments suggest that the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC) may be reaching the end of its life as an agency. This post considers how Congress’ role in creating the agency may have played a part in its potential demise.
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