Monthly Archives: September 2014
“NYC: Where Teachout won and where she lost”
@Lessig Follow Up: “We Lost. Hopefully.”
“The Kansas Republican Who Dems Love To Hate Is In Re-Election Trouble”
“Georgia state senator upset over efforts to increase black voter turnout, says he wants ‘more educated voters”
“Fraud investigation condemned as effort to ‘suppress’ voters”
The latest from Georgia.
“Less Traveled By: Not Many Dual Track Voters – What Does It Mean?”
“On Points: Local Broadcast TV Ad Spend: Starting to Settle?”
Cook Political Report:
Rumors of local TV’s aging and eventual demise as the leading medium for political advertising have abounded this year, but are greatly exaggerated. It simply has comprised too large a share of campaign ad budgets for… Continue reading
CPA Letter in WSJ on Corporate Political Disclosure
Online Debate on National Popular Vote for President
Here, at Saving America.
Message from AALS Election Law Section
Josh Douglas asked me to post the following:
Dear Election Law Professors,
The Executive Committee of the AALS Section on Election Law has selected its winner of the Call for Papers for January’s meeting: David Garter (ASU), Universal Participation.
We… Continue reading
@Lessig: “We Lost. Badly”
He writes:
There’s no spinning this. We tried something that others said couldn’t be done. So far, the evidence supports their theory. We went big in New Hampshire. Going big increased the salience of the issue among the citizens of… Continue reading
35 Organizations Send Letter Calling for Up-or-Down Vote on EAC Commissioner Nominees
First Major Test of MayDay SuperPAC to End SuperPACS Comes Up Short in #NHSEN
Roll Call reports on the victory of Scott Brown in the Republican primary:
Rubens had the backing of Mayday PAC, which ran $1.6 million in ads supporting him. He and Smith were tied at 23 percent when the Associated Press… Continue reading