In advance of a possible Susan Collins loss in Maine, the headline writers at the New York Times and Washington Post are blaming Maine’s ranked-choice voting system (don’t blame the authors of these stories, they do not control the headlines).… Continue reading
I’ve published closing reflections on where we are now, compared to the enormous concerns we had over the spring and summer, with running an election amidst the virus. The essay, entitled Amid Voting Fights, a Huge Expansion, is the WSJ’s… Continue reading
Maine’s Senate race is considered close, and if so, there’s an additional reason it could take longer — maybe several days — to determine who has won. The reason is that Maine now uses ranked-choice voting (RCV), and there… Continue reading
We are going to see mistakes about this, as in this recent story from an otherwise good Politico journalist.
Normally I would not call something like this out, but this is important and we need journalists and others to get… Continue reading
Important Salon article, glad to see one of my co-authors quoted:
“I do think it’s safe to vote in person,” Dean Blumberg, an associate professor in the Department of Pediatrics at the University of California–Davis, told Salon. “I think for… Continue reading
I’ve published this essay, which steps back from all the specific legal issues surrounding the election to bring to the surface an underlying question about why our legal system leaves us so much uncertainty about such vital questions.
From The … Continue reading
Short answer: around 80%.
As we discuss the numbers that are emerging each day of absentee ballots that have been returned already in various states, I went back to look at the final tallies on this issue from 2016. From… Continue reading
From the WSJ, which is closely tracking this issue:
That puts critical votes at risk in an election that, more than any before, will hang on mail-in ballots. To find choke points for those ballots, the Journal is tracking… Continue reading
The fact that the New Hampshire Union Leader is endorsing Biden has made big news, understandably enough given that it’s the first time in more than 100 years the Union Leader has endorsed a Democrat for President. Here’s what the… Continue reading
Here’s the start:
Monday, Oct. 19, 2 a.m.: I’m so overactivated, I can’t sleep. I want to vote during the first hour of the first day of early voting here in surprisingly purple mid-South Florida. I have to vote… Continue reading
In today’s Washington Post story about President Trump’s “repeated” discussions with aides about whether to fire FBI Director Christopher A. Wray after Election Day, here’s what the President’s aides reportedly say about the reasons for these repeated discussions and why… Continue reading
Later today, the Social Science Research Council’s “Anxieties of Democracy” program is hosting this event. The event features Harvard’s Steven Levitsky, co-author of How Democracies Die; the Director of the Agora Institute at John Hopkins, Hahrie Han, whose… Continue reading
I’m a member of this Task Force and we have just released our legal analysis and report on these election issues.
The other members of the task force are James A. Gardner, Deborah Pearlstein, Shugerman, Ava B. Ayers, Wilfred U.… Continue reading