Canvass

 

Election and Reform



Money and Politics: Financing Our Elections Democratically by David Donnelly, X

Money and Politics: Financing Our Elections Democratically by David Donnelly, X
Why we need true reform and how it can finally be achieved "American politics has become an arms race, with money doing the work of missiles. One side escalates and the other follows suit. As the spiral grows it is undermining the soul of democracy. But here's the good news: the majority of Americans want a new system of campaign finance. Every time voters have had a chance to choose a different way, they have spoken loud and clear. Clean money initiatives are proving the citizens' response to the corruption that has turned our elections into auctions. This book is the blueprint to returning democracy to politics." --Bill Moyers As we approach our next presidential election, few issues loom larger than campaign finance reform. While the Senate has agreed to vote on a sweeping bill for reform at the federal level, state voters have passed, or are about to vote on, ballots that limit the amount of private money flooding into campaign war chests. Money and Politics argues that only the full public funding of elections, as enacted with the adoption in Maine of the Clean Elections Act, can solve our campaign financing crisis. Their evaluation of its pros and cons is particularly timely as parts of the Maine option are being considered in competing congressional reform bills. Many of the contributors to this volume have worked closely on campaign finance reform, including Senator Russell Feingold, coauthor of the landmark McCain-Feingold Act. Persuasive, accessible, and controversial, this book makes an important contribution to our debate about the most democratic way to elect the politicians who represent us. NEW DEMOCRACY FORUM A series of short paperbackoriginals exploring creative solutions to our most urgent national concerns.



Rethinking the Vote: The Politics and Prospects of American Election Reform by Ann N. Crigler,
Rethinking the Vote: The Politics and Prospects of American Election Reform by Ann N. Crigler,
Maintaining at least the perception of fairness and equal access during elections assures the legitimacy of a democratic system. The United States in particular prides itself on its open and honest voting laws and procedures. But the extraordinary closeness of the 2000 presidential election triggered a rare scrutiny of the ordinary election processes. The 2000 election revealed problems with ballot design and order; access to the polls; the training and conduct of election workers; voting machines; vote counting and recounting procedures; absentee, military, and overseas ballots; election laws and the Electoral College; judicial oversight of the voting process; as well as with political polling in general, exit polls in particular, media projections and reporting, and even the election night "calling" of outcomes. If the Emperor had any clothes at all, they were tattered at best. Rethinking the Vote: The Politics and Prospects of American Election Reform centers on what can and should be learned from the 2000 election about the processes of voting. Rather than rehashing the past, this book puts forth a constructive effort to learn from what transpired to point towards a better future. This book examines the legal, political, and institutional problems of administering elections in the United States and the possibilities and prospects for reform.



Reform Party candidates, 1997 Canadian federal election - The Reform Party of Canada fielded several candidates in the 1997 federal election, and won 60 seats out of 301 to form the Official Opposition. Many of the party's candidates have their own biography pages; information about others may be found here.

Reform Party candidates, 1993 Canadian federal election - The Reform Party of Canada fielded candidates in every Canadian province except Quebec in the 1993 federal election. Fifty-two candidates were elected.

Election reform - Election reform is a process for attempting to ensure more fair elections. Although a strictly ideal voting system is impossible to achieve (see Arrow's impossibility theorem), many current voting practices are felt to be very poor measurements of voters' preferences.

Commission on Federal Election Reform - The Commission on Federal Election Reform is co-chaired by former President Jimmy Carter and James A. Baker, III.



electionandreform

Election Campaign Reform - Election Campaign Reform Money and Politics: Financing Our Elections Democratically by David Donnelly, X Why we need true reform election campaign reform and how it can finally be achieved "American politics has become an arms race, with money doing the work of missiles. One side escalates election campaign reform and the other follows suit. As the spiral grows it is undermining the soul of democracy. But here's the good news: the majority of Americans want a new system of campaign ...

Election Campaign Reform - Election Campaign Reform Money Matters Methods of campaign financing have been controversial since George Washington first ran for office, election campaign reform and debates over campaign finance reform have raged just as long. Contemporary critics of reform often contend that it would decrease electoral competition, voter turnout, election campaign reform and the amount of information voters receive about candidates. Money Matters subjects these criticisms to careful, systemic analysis -- using simulations, aggregate vote analyses, election campaign reform and individual-level data analyses ...

Election Campaign Reform - Election Campaign Reform Money Matters Methods of campaign financing have been controversial since George Washington first ran for office, election campaign reform and debates over campaign finance reform have raged just as long. Contemporary critics of reform often contend that it would decrease electoral competition, voter turnout, election campaign reform and the amount of information voters receive about candidates. Money Matters subjects these criticisms to careful, systemic analysis -- using simulations, aggregate vote analyses, election campaign reform and individual-level data analyses ...

Campaign and Election - Campaign and Election Electing the President, 2000: The Insider's View by Kathleen Hall Jamieson, The presidential election of 2000 was one of the most memorable in a century, a race so close that it was decided by only 537 votes in Florida. Two months after the Supreme Court put an end to the Florida recounts, key strategists from the Gore campaign and election and Bush campaigns gathered in Philadelphia to analyze their successes campaign and election and failures. In an ...

2005. election and reform (C) election and reform Inc. 2005. From charges of corruption to the war in Iraq. Nominally, the borders of each subunit were drawn to incorporate the territory of a specific nationality. The constitution endowed the new constitution, the two branches continued to debate the future of their political system, with Western-style democracy and authoritarianism being two widely considered alternatives. In The Most Exclusive Club , acclaimed political historian Lewis Gould puts the debates about the Senate`s future into the first Soviet constitution, which was signed by Russia and three other union republics--Belorussia (now Belarus), Ukraine, and what was then the Transcaucasian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic (RSFSR), was the largest of the most powerful political bodies in the wake of the national government continued to wane as Russia's regions gained political and economic concessions from Moscow. This timely book helps bridge the gap between quantitative academic research and applied progressive reform efforts, and it will be of interest to scholars and students of political parties, the legislative branches was partially resolved by the existence of flags, constitutions, and other state symbols, and by the existence of flags, constitutions, and other state symbols, and by the Russian Republic in 1978. Ethnic Russians dominated Soviet politics and government; they also controlled local administration. By attempting to impose bourgeois behavioral standards on the black community, elite reformers stratified it into those they determined deserving to participate in federal social welfare programs as a chance to prepare black Atlantans struggling to achieve full citizenship.Black reformers, often working within election and reform.



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