Tag Archives: democracy

Vote Nevada Update 12/9/2025

Vote Nevada Supporters,

A few pre-holiday updates:

Here are the 13 bills the Governor signed from the special session:

https://www.leg.state.nv.us/App/NELIS/REL/36th2025Special/Bills/Passed/BecameLaw

The interim legislative session begins January 6th.  You can read more about the interim session and see the meeting dates here:  https://www.leg.state.nv.us/App/InterimCommittee/REL/Interim2025

The interim committees are included on this page.  You can see which legislators are on each committee by clicking on the associated committee link.  https://www.leg.state.nv.us/App/InterimCommittee/REL/Interim2025/CommitteeList

To prepare, Vote Nevada is offering its “Advocacy During the Interim Legislative Session Training” on January 3, 2026, from 9 to 10 AM via Zoom.  RSVP here:

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/UCa99yKuR8GCRpXJh0Dirw

I will share the meeting recording afterward.

You may have also heard about the drama at the Nevada System of Higher Education Regents meeting last Friday.  It was even more tense than what was reported in the news.  

The proposed hefty tuition increase vote was postponed until January 16th, so I will be discussing why and what may be next at a “What happened at the Regents meeting?” update on Friday, December 12th, from 8 to 9 AM, via Zoom.  RSVP:

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/8NIX4tWgRyKj0IG6LUBNOw

You can read more here: https://thenevadaindependent.com/article/students-faculty-decry-proposed-tuition-hikes-at-nevada-colleges 

I will share the meeting recording afterward.

Finally, our Respect Nevada Voters ballot question signature gathering campaign is underway.  We are asking supporters to Sign Up to Sign so we can set up petition signature-gathering events right after the holidays.

More information here: https://vote-nevada-blog.org/voting-rights-ballot-questions-2026/

Thank you for being Nevadans with me,

Sondra

Vote Nevada is now qualified to receive donations through Smith’s Inspiring Donations; you can read more about how to donate to Vote Nevada each time you use your Smith’s loyalty card here: https://www.smithsfoodanddrug.com/i/community/smiths-inspiring-donations

Vote Nevada is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit civic engagement organization.  Anyone can become a supporter by emailing info@vote-nevada.org; we have no membership dues. You can now donate to Vote Nevada through PayPal at  https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=L423L7FBMMBEA

 

 

Vote Nevada PAC Statement of Ballot Question Withdrawal

It is with great disappointment that Vote Nevada PAC announces the withdrawal of our Independent Redistricting Commission ballot initiative, which aimed to bring redistricting into the open with legal accountability and transparency. 

We wanted Nevadans working with legislative leaders to draw district maps after each census, in open meetings, and with the focus on fair representation.  

Once again, however, the Nevada Democratic Party is using a misguided Nevada Supreme Court ruling to not only endorse the current, behind-closed-doors, and therefore corrupt redistricting process, but also to eliminate our right to amend the state constitution through the initiative process.

Suing to silence the voices of the people may be a smart political strategy, but it ultimately undermines democracy.  Both parties should review this country’s history to be reminded that neither is entitled to use apportionment to accrue power that puts donors over voters. 

In the legal complaint against our ballot initiative, see attached, the Democratic Party argues that we must place taxes in the Nevada Constitution when running ballot initiatives that amend the state Constitution and may cost even $1 in state funds.

Putting taxes into the Constitution is an irresponsible and ludicrous proposition. Nevadans are well aware of the issues we face because our mining tax is enshrined in the state Constitution. Based on that experience, we would never believe that putting more taxes in our Constitution is a sound idea. 

This argument comes from a 2022 Nevada Supreme Court ruling that re-interpreted Article 19, Section 6 of the Nevada Constitution, which states:

Sec. 6.  Limitation on initiative making appropriation or requiring expenditure of money.  This Article does not permit the proposal of any statute or statutory amendment which makes an appropriation or otherwise requires the expenditure of money, unless such statute or amendment also imposes a sufficient tax, not prohibited by the Constitution, or otherwise constitutionally provides for raising the necessary revenue(Emphasis added)

The words “statute” and “statutory,” which have unambiguous definitions in the English language, (a written law passed by a legislative body) are the only two identifiers included. However, in the 2022 Education Freedom PAC v. Reid ruling, the Court interpreted Section 6 to mean statutory AND constitutional (a body of fundamental principles or established precedents according to which a state or other organization is acknowledged to be governed) amendment ballot initiatives. 

A plain language reading of this Section does not include constitutional amendment ballot questions, yet, because of this misguided interpretation, Nevadans are now, for all intents and purposes, blocked from exercising our constitutionally granted right to propose changes to the state Constitution that may expend even $1 in state funds. 

Lacking guidance from the Court or anyone else, we have no clear understanding of how to incorporate tax law into Nevada’s Constitution.   

Even if that guidance existed, we refuse to put taxes into our state Constitution, so our only course of action to restore our right to propose constitutional amendments through the initiative process is to amend our state Constitution to clarify its original meaning in Article 19.

The current misguided interpretation of this critical right cannot be allowed to remain unchallenged.

We are exploring the most effective way to move forward by addressing this error in a way that does not cause the Democratic Party to sue once again to silence us, so please stay tuned.

Sondra Cosgrove

Doug Goodman

Claire Thomas

You can refer back to our history of redistricting reform in Nevada here: Brief redistricting reform history in Nevada

You can read the lawsuit filed against me, Doug, and Claire here: 2025-09-29-Complaint-1 

 

Vote Nevada Update 3/23/2025

Vote Nevada Supporters,

We are now entering week 8 of the legislative session.  The last day of the session is June 2nd.  Legislators must start closing budgets on April 1st and per the Nevada Constitution the education budget must be funded first.  Yet we are still unclear whether the federal government will fulfill its funding obligations to the states. 

There is a standing court order requiring the Executive Branch to allocate funds passed by Congress and approved by the President, but we are still in a constitutional limbo.

Additionally, the continuing resolution just passed in the Senate will impact the larger federal budget process. If no federal funds or even reduced federal funds come to Nevada due to that resolution, our legislators and the Governor will be forced to make cuts to state programs. 

In sum, representative government is failing at the national level as constitutional checks and balances are superseded by partisan politics. And that failure will have deep repercussions in the states. 

It appears that the only current solution to changing what is happening federally is going to court, hoping, and waiting for the next election.  But, even if the courts issue rulings directing the president to go back to Congress to ask for laws and funding allocations to be changed, it is possible the current Congress will affirm the President’s Executive Orders as law.  

Similarly, if the President decides to just ignore the courts, it is unclear what will happen.  Federal agency heads could be held in contempt of court, but the President is immune per the U.S. Supreme Court.

From a community perspective, the U.S. Constitution offers us no guide for what to do when the system of checks and balances breaks down.  Electing new people in 2026 is one remedy being floated, but if we change the majority in the U.S. House of Representatives and the new majority demands the President stop doing something, but he ignores them, then what?

Do we wait until 2028 and hope our political system is responsive enough to elect people who will undertake a serious study of how to ensure checks and balances work?  Right now, no one who is talking about the 2026 election or the 2028 election is mentioning constitutional changes that may need to happen.

The history behind the 14th and 25th Amendments are instructive. 

We can’t assume that one party will control the government for forever and a day.  We need some systemic fixes at the federal and possibly state level to make government work in ways that are legitimate and not subject to partisan influences. 

Are the political parties even willing to adopt new processes that will make our government less susceptible to partisanship?  Representative government is dependent on practices that ensure the people are being represented.  The political parties, however, seem to have forgotten that they are not the people.

We have a similar problem at the state level.  With each legislative session it is becoming more evident that our part-time partisan legislative system is not working.  It’s not because legislators are part-time or because they only have 120 days to do the state’s business, it’s because the political parties have too much control over the inputs and outcomes.  

When was the last time our elected officials spent time listening to community members to hear what we all want?  It’s not happening during elections, instead, we are bombarded with campaign ads, mailers, and text messages that just attack the other side and beg for money.  If you see a candidate, you’ll usually hear talking points.  Once the election is over, legislators meet with their party leadership and interest groups, not constituents, to prepare for the session.

I live on the east side of Las Vegas.  My legislators either had no contest in the primary or general election or are in between their first and second term, I seriously doubt either one knows what is most important for me.

During the session, how many weekend town halls are scheduled by legislators to let us know what happened that week?

Instead, we sit and watch while bills that address issues we are often unclear about move from one stage of the legislative process to the next.  The Governor decides which bills to sign and which bills to veto. And then the next election cycle immediately begins with the parties attacking each other.

We have an interim legislative session where committees mirroring the legislature’s committee structure review issues predetermined by the parties and special interests.  The public is not asked to weigh in on what we think or would like to see addressed in the next regular session.

It’s no wonder things always seem broken and unresponsive to community needs. Gerrymandering, closed primaries, and a growing number of uncontested races are all contributing to this problem.  But these are symptoms of poor systems and processes that sideline the people. 

At the federal level we need a solution to make checks and balances work and at the state level we need a system that can minimize partisanship in our state’s representative government.

Which brings me to this year’s Vote Nevada Summer of Civics 2025.

Once the legislative session ends, we will kick things off with our usual review of which bills were passed and signed by the Governor.  This year we also have something new to debut, a Citizens Interim Committee experiment.  Instead of only looking at issues, our interim committee will also look at systems and processes.

We often speak about different types of isms in American politics, but we rarely discuss our tradition of pragmatism.  Pragmatism focuses on creating systems and processes that work.  If we want certain outcomes, then what systems and processes can most effectively produce those outcomes? 

So, our Citizens Interim Committee will use a pragmatic approach.  

For instance, if we want a more responsive representative government, how do we ensure all community members are able to have their voices and concerns heard? Does voting and elections do this, or do we need to add something else?

Do we need a different process for developing our workforce? What do workers need to be successful and what system and/or process will lead to that success?  

We are also reprising our workshops on running ballot questions and on how to run for nonpartisan offices as well as how to run as nonpartisan candidates in partisan races.  I will send another email as we get closer to June 2nd detailing all the different ways to get involved. 

Lastly, please join me and the CSN Women’s Alliance on March 28th for our Shirley Chisholm Leadership Academy.  This virtual event will feature a series of panels between 9 AM and 3 PM.  A new panel will start at the top of each hour.  Don’t worry if you can’t spend the day with us; we’ll record each panel so you can watch later.

RSVP: t.ly/bhm7v

See the panel schedule here: Leadership Academy Panels

Thanks for being Nevadans with me,

 Sondra 

Vote Nevada is now qualified to receive donations through
Smith’s Inspiring Donations; you can read more about how to donate to Vote Nevada each time you use your Smith’s loyalty card here 
https://www.smithsfoodanddrug.com/i/community/smiths-inspiring-donations

Vote Nevada is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit civic engagement
organization.  Anyone can become a supporter by emailing 
info@vote-nevada.org;
we have no membership dues. You can now donate to Vote Nevada through
PayPal at  
https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=L423L7FBMMBEA

 

Vote Nevada Update: 2/23/2025

Vote Nevada Supporters,

We are heading into the fourth week of the legislative session and things are picking up, so, please be sure to check the scheduled meetings page for the bills to be heard this week. https://www.leg.state.nv.us/App/Calendar/A/

The Vote Nevada Nonpartisan Caucus is meeting tonight at 6 pm.  We are discussing the good governance bills and whether the legislation being proposed so far represents the needs of the people.  You can RSVP here to join us: https://vote-nevada.news/VN-Nonpartisan-Caucus-Meetings

In representative democracy, the people vote for fellow community members to represent their interests when writing bills and voting on various issues. Our current system of government at most levels is supposed to represent community needs. 

One weakness in this system, however, is that the two political parties have decided when a party member is elected, that the newly elected official should only represent the party’s interests and priorities.  The minority who voted for someone else are left out and lose their right to representation.  This causes frustration that can lead to extremism.

The other main weakness in this system, which seems to be growing worse with each election cycle, is the lack of direct communication between elected officials and the people they represent.

Due to uncompetitive races and campaigns that rely on ads, text messages, and mailers, many elected officials spend minimal time in their districts listening to broad swaths of their constituents.  And, for our legislators, due to the lack of staff during the interim, most community members have few, if any, opportunities to speak to them officially. 

This makes the legislative session the only time our legislators are “on the clock,” yet how often can you talk to legislators directly about what we want fixed?

Without town halls, true surveys, or other forms of authentic communication, we the people are often left out of our representative democracy.

We need governing processes that welcome more voices into the system. Showing up to speak in support or opposition of bills apparently isn’t possible for most voters, especially when opportunities to show up happen during the work day and can change from week to week.

So, tonight’s question is: Do we have bills that can make the government more representative of the people and our needs?

Please join us if you can, and thank you for being Nevadans with me,

Sondra

Vote Nevada is now qualified to receive donations through Smith’s Inspiring Donations; you can read more about how to donate to Vote Nevada each time you use your Smith’s loyalty card here  https://www.smithsfoodanddrug.com/i/community/smiths-inspiring-donations

Vote Nevada is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit civic engagement organization.  Anyone can become a supporter by emailing in…@vote-nevada.org; we have no membership dues. 

You can now donate to Vote Nevada through PayPal at  https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=L423L7FBMMBEA

Vote Nevada Update 12-31-2024

Vote Nevada Supporters,

I hope you all had a restful holiday break and are looking forward to a New Year. 

Here are some brief reminders, we have:

A Nonpartisan Caucus meeting this Saturday, January 4th, at 9 to 10 AM via Zoom. 

Legislative Advocacy Training on Friday, January 10th, at 6 to 7:30 PM, via Zoom. 

Empowering Black Women Through Civic Engagement on Saturday, January 11th, from 10 AM to 1 PM, at the Historic Westside School. 

On January 4th, 9 to 10 AM, based on a nonpartisan approach, we’ll discuss legislative advocacy strategies that focus on issues, respectful dialogue, and achieving outcomes.  A nonpartisan approach removes party politics from the equation, while including discussions based on the merits of bills. If you are interested in being civically engaged without all the exhausting drama, join us for a strategic conversation.

RSVP: t.ly/awiKb

Heading (1)

On January 10th, 6 to 7:30 PM, we will review the legislature’s online advocacy tools and then chat about best practices for supporting and opposing bills.

RSVP: t.ly/dxNG1

Join Vote Nevada Legislative Advocacy 101

Join Evelyn Pacheco on January 11th, 10 AM to 1 PM, for a panel discussion about Empowering Black Women Through Civic Engagement at the Historic Westside School. 

Together We Create Change (3)

Happy New Year!

Thank you for being Nevadans with me,

Sondra

Vote Nevada is now qualified to receive donations through
Smith’s Inspiring Donations; you can read more about how to donate to Vote Nevada each time you use your Smith’s loyalty card here https://www.smithsfoodanddrug.com/i/community/smiths-inspiring-donations

Vote Nevada is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit civic engagement
organization.  Anyone can become a supporter by emailing info@vote-nevada.org;
we have no membership dues. You can now donate to Vote Nevada through
PayPal at  https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=L423L7FBMMBEA

 

 

Vote Nevada Shirley Chisholm Democracy Project 2025

Vote Nevada Supporters,

We had a very productive meeting to discuss our Shirley Chisholm Democracy Project.  You can watch the recording here: https://vote-nevada.news/Vote-Nevada-Democracy-Project

Our main democracy priorities for 2025 are:

  1. Outreach to young voters who did not vote to listen to their concerns with our election system.
  2. Develop a public civics education program.
  3. Create nonpartisan spaces where the public can speak with candidates and elected officials.
  4. Advocate for the 2025 legislature to pass an open primaries bill.

Young voters were the largest group to not vote in 2024.  We need to know why, not make assumptions, and do what we can to listen to and address their concerns.

We must combine automatic voter registration with a companion public civics education program. Adults who move to Nevada and young people in Nevada need reliable and nonpartisan sources of basic civics information, and the ability to have civics questions answered.

Instead of hosting candidate forums right before elections, we need regular opportunities for community members to speak with elected officials and candidates.  This initiative will be part of the public civics education program.

Lastly, our electorate is developing beyond purely partisan groups, so our election system must account for this new reality.  Over 663,000 voters voted for Ballot Question 3, and many more said they would vote for an open primary ballot question.  Why spend millions of dollars and wait until 2028 to vote on an open primary ballot question when legislative leadership can submit an open primary bill for the 2025 legislative session? 

In fact, we already have an open primary bill on the NV legislative website. SB121 from the 2021 legislative session is an open primary bill that can easily be resubmitted as a bill in the 2025 session.

If you agree, please ask your legislative representatives to support passing SB121 from the 2021 legislative session in our upcoming session.  Find your legislators through this tool.  Type in your address, and the tool will tell you who represents you and the contact information of those legislators.   https://www.leg.state.nv.us/whosmylegislator/

Incumbent legislators and legislative leadership can still submit bills for the 2025 legislative session.  The Speaker submitted AB528 in 2023 on the last weekend of the session, so we know this can happen.

Thank you for being Nevadans with me,

Sondra

Vote Nevada is now qualified to receive donations through
Smith’s Inspiring Donations; you can read more about how to donate to Vote
Nevada each time you use your Smith’s loyalty card here:   https://www.smithsfoodanddrug.com/i/community/smiths-inspiring-donations

Vote Nevada is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit civic engagement
organization.  Anyone can become a supporter by emailing info@vote-nevada.org;
we have no membership dues. You can now donate to Vote Nevada through
PayPal at  https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=L423L7FBMMBEA

 

 

 

Vote Nevada: What Happened?

What happened:

As a historian, I see this election fitting squarely within American political history. We have a long tradition of supporting presidential candidates with very aggressive personalities, so many that this personality type is historically associated with being a good president. 

Voters often reflexively support these candidates because we have been conditioned to associate aggressiveness with problem-solving and governing.

John Adams, Andrew Jackson, Teddy Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson, and Donald Trump, to name just a few, fit within this category.  

To overcome this mindset, a presidential candidate with a different personality style must have actionable plans and the means to enact those plans.  Action is seen as assertive, which can replace being aggressive. 

Franklin D. Roosevelt and his wife, Eleanor, are prime examples. Voters elected them four times to reward both for being very action-oriented.  I include Eleanor because FDR depended on her in many ways.

Franklin and Eleanor were successful not only because of New Deal promises and outcomes but also because of their ability and willingness to act assertively.

Under these circumstances, Vice President Harris had an arduous path to the White House. With what some voters perceive as an economy in crisis and without bold plans coupled with the power to act, enough voters either did not vote or chose the aggressive personality.

But why did voters also reject open primaries and ranked-choice voting? 

The anti-Ballot Question 3 consultants worked hard to simulate an aggressive personality type to trigger acceptance of the status quo.  Their mailers and ads were commands, often based on fear.

The anti-Ballot Question 3 message aggressively attacked ranked choice voting as threatening the status quo, which it does.  The messaging failed to include that it is a threat because it dismantles a system that rewards consultants who prefer electing candidates by leaning into aggression.

Opponents said they could not accept ranked choice voting because it was too confusing. We can discuss later why “confusing” is unacceptable when describing someone else’s learning ability. As an educator and someone with a child with a learning disability, I find the way that word was used offensive. 

The official Yes on Ballot Question 3 campaign consultants also focused on the open primary component because that’s where they found the most support. They largely ignored ranked choice voting and utterly failed to defend it or challenge the discriminatory intent behind saying it is confusing for some people.  

I can also frame the BQ3 loss this way: A majority of voters sided with an aggressive and very male approach to politics and rejected a more civil and female approach.  Many women have been elected under ranked-choice voting systems, so the evidence of the differences in approaches is pretty clear.

Where do we go from here if we want to reform the status quo?

First, we jettison paid consultants, which seems to be the root of the problem. We can handle this as Nevadans. 

Second, we must advocate for a top-two open primary bill to pass in the 2025 legislative session.  If BQ3 opponents claim to support a top-two open primary, we can help them pass that reform now. 

Senator Ben Kieckhefer submitted an open primary bill in the 2021 legislative session, but the Democratic majority refused to give it a hearing.  If Democrats have changed their minds and will pass an open primary bill, then let’s ask our legislators to support passing SB121 in the next legislative session.  You can read SB121 here https://www.leg.state.nv.us/App/NELIS/REL/81st2021/Bill/7459/Overview

Third, let’s redouble our outreach to voters, especially Gen Z, who aren’t voting. As you can see in this chart, many young voters in Clark County are not voting.  We need their voices in our elections to provide balance.  Look at how many young voters opted out in this election:

image

Younger voters are much less likely to support aggressive and belligerent candidates due to their experience with mental health-triggering events.  After many school shootings and a pandemic, younger voters tend to reject experiences that feel like an attack on their well-being.

Uncoincidentally, many young voters are registered nonpartisan and reject belonging to one of the political parties, which can be very aggressive and combative.  This is even more true if a young person hasn’t grown up in a politically active family.

To attract young voters’ attention, our message must emphasize the inclusivity of an open primary and how rank-choice voting rewards candidates who are civil, collaborative, and willing to compromise.

We need face-to-face conversations and positive social media messages that include educational content without being patronizing. All our messaging should align with positive mental health practices, which our current political rhetoric does not.

The official Yes on BQ3 campaign tried to shame older voters into voting to open the primaries, which may seem less aggressive. But by also excluding ranked-choice voting, they failed to speak to thousands of young voters who are seeking an antidote to a political system that feels like a mental illness. 

We can talk about ranked-choice voting positively.  I have information about ranked-choice voting here on the Vote Nevada Blog: https://vote-nevada-blog.org/ 

Ultimately, empowering voters willing to change the status quo will create the change we need.

If you agree, let’s start now.

We can start planning our assertive path forward at the next Vote Nevada meeting on Saturday, November 16th, at 6 pm via Zoom. RSVP: https://vote-nevada.news/Democracy-Project-2025

Sondra

Shirly Chisholm Democracy Project 2025

Vote Nevada Update 11/9/2024

Vote Nevada supporters,

While all the ballots have yet to be cured and counted, Vote Nevada is planning for the upcoming legislative session, which starts February 3, 2025.

The next important legislative event is December 2, when the Economic Forum meets to forecast the upcoming biennial tax revenue.

This is the dollar amount the Governor’s budget cannot surpass unless he plans to raise taxes. The Economic Forum’s report will also provide a fiscal snapshot with possible warnings of any economic weaknesses.

https://www.leg.state.nv.us/App/InterimCommittee/REL/Interim2023/Meeting/34551 

While the Democratic Party failed to gain a legislative supermajority, it will be in the majority in both legislative houses, so all committee chairs will be Democrats. However, the Governor will hold veto power over bills arriving at his desk, so the Republicans will work through him to advance their priorities. 

We will encourage bipartisan collaboration to get things done instead of the parties engaging in political games. 

Affordable housing and childcare, which have state and local implications, were important issues highlighted in this last election cycle. Vote Nevada will be working on both issues during this legislative session, especially affordable childcare.

Additionally, we are launching the Shirley Chisholm Democracy Project. Through this initiative, we will enhance public civics education and civic engagement opportunities, combat incivility, pass open primaries, and continue to learn from Shirley Chisholm’s life.

Through the Shirley Chisholm Democracy Project, we will reach out to eligible Nevadans who do not vote. There are many reasons why someone decides not to vote, but if we listen to these community members and address their concerns, hopefully, more will turn out and vote in 2026.  

We will also help voters new to Nevada’s election processes through public education that answers their civics questions, and civic engagement opportunities that show how voting translates into laws and beneficial actions by elected local leaders.  Our goal is to connect elections and community improvements in voters’ minds.

We all feel exhausted from the incessant negative campaigning and the struggle to discern honest information from political spin.  Civil dialogue, collaboration, and even compromise are all strategies we can adopt to change political communication by decreasing dishonesty and negativity.  We will do this under a “Let’s be Civil & Honest” Democracy Project goal.

Lastly, we will ask legislators to adopt a bill from the 2021 legislative session that would have created a top-two open primary for partisan races and to submit it as a bill in the 2025 legislative session.   https://www.leg.state.nv.us/App/NELIS/REL/81st2021/Bill/7459/Overview

This will give everyone who said they would support an open primary the opportunity to advocate for its passage, and it invites nonpartisan voters to participate in a more inclusive election system.

Please let me know if you would like to work on any of these goals because we need to start as soon as possible.

My analysis of what happened with Ballot Question 3 will come in a separate email/blog post.

Thank you for being Nevadans with me,

Sondra

Vote Nevada is now qualified to receive donations through Smith’s Inspiring Donations; you can read more about how to donate to Vote Nevada each time you use your Smith’s loyalty card here:  https://www.smithsfoodanddrug.com/i/community/smiths-inspiring-donations

Vote Nevada is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit civic engagement organization.  Anyone can become a supporter by emailing info@vote-nevada.org; we have no membership dues. You can now donate to Vote Nevada through PayPal at  https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=L423L7FBMMBEA

 

Vote Nevada Update 7/14/2024

Vote Nevada Supporters,

Yesterday, we had our second successful Practice Ranked Choice Voting Zoom event.  Thank you to everyone who attended.  Attendees asked great questions, including one about how the county clerks and registrars of elections feel about implementing ranked-choice voting. 

Luckily, Carson City Clerk Scott Hoen attended and gave his perspective as a clerk.  I spoke with Lorena Portillo, who took over for Joe Gloria as the Clark County elections administrator, so I could share what Lorena told me.  She affirmed that our voting machines include software to manage ranked-choice elections. Still, the software only allows ranking for up to 3 candidates, so we will need a software upgrade to manage 5 candidates.  This will resemble our upgrades to the mail-in ballot signature verification system.

The more significant issues, and Scott’s response, focused on funding for our election operations, from voter registration to counting mail-in ballots to voter education.  We have adopted many election system upgrades over the last twenty years, yet our legislature has often not adequately funded implementation.

Automatic voter registration at the DMV is one example.  We register thousands of people to vote automatically unless the voter opts out. Yet, we spend almost nothing to ensure new voters can access the civics information needed to become confident voters.  We also devote nothing to virtual and in-person practice opportunities where voters can practice casting an in-person or mail-in ballot. 

Creating voting barriers for voters who need civics education is eerily like a time when we used literacy tests to prohibit Black Americans from voting.  And keeping people in the dark about our election processes allows conspiracies to blossom and grow out of control.

A related unfortunate affliction of our political system is how expensive it is to engage in direct democracy opportunities.  Participating in our ballot question process is prohibitively expensive, which means the political parties and wealthy community members have full access, while average Nevadans have almost none.  Organizations and individuals with money can pay lawyers, advertising agencies, and media outlets to shape the reform narrative.  Meanwhile, grassroots engagers have minimal influence over this tool of direct democracy.

Ballot Question 3’s grassroots supporters face this problem.  We are trying to offer as much voter education and chances to practice ranked choice voting as possible but with minimal funding.  

We are doing our best, so please take a little time to learn about the Ballot Question 3 reforms and participate in a practice ranked-choice voting election.

Here is yesterday’s Practice Ranked Choice Voting Election event recording: https://vote-nevada.news/Practice-RCV-July-13

We have three in-person sessions to practice ranked choice voting on July 16th in Reno and July 20th and 27th in Las Vegas.  Please RSVP here to attend: https://forms.gle/EmztaurQwE7mnmsm7

Here are the resources related to ranked-choice voting I sent after our first meeting: https://vote-nevada-blog.org/2024/07/06/practice-ranked-choice-voting-update-7-6-2024/

Thank you for being Nevadans with me,

Sondra

Vote Nevada is now qualified to receive donations through Smith’s Inspiring Donations; you can read more about how to donate to Vote Nevada each time you use your Smith’s loyalty card here:  https://www.smithsfoodanddrug.com/i/community/smiths-inspiring-donations

Vote Nevada is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit civic engagement organization.  Anyone can become a supporter by emailing info@vote-nevada.org; we have no membership dues. You can now donate to Vote Nevada through PayPal at  https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=L423L7FBMMBEA

Ranked Choice Voting Practice Elections

Vote Nevada Supporters,

I hope everyone is staying cool and safe until the heat starts to come down this weekend. If you are looking for something to do Saturday evening, please join us via Zoom to practice ranked-choice voting in a mock election. A little teaser, it’s a sports-related mock election~ You can RSVP here for the Zoom July 13th, 5:30 to 7:00 PM, event: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUlcuGppjkjG9fAtyz7onKSgnWJyslbzXOI#/registration

Starting next week, we have a series of in-person ranked choice voting mock elections scheduled in Reno, East Las Vegas, and on the Historic West Side.  Now is the perfect time to ask questions and clarify anything you may have heard about rank-choice voting.

You can RSVP for any of the in-person ranked choice voting mock election events here: https://forms.gle/ttUoGu2dF8kUbwmV8

Options to learn about ranked choic voting

In August, Vote Nevada will focus on civics education and civic engagement.  We must start reaching out to our new voters, both first-time and new-to-the-state voters, before early voting begins in October.  Every state manages its elections differently, so even folks who have been voting for many years in other states and just moved to Nevada will need some basic information about our flavor of democracy.

Our voter education and engagement project is called the Shirley Chisholm Democracy Initiative. Because who’s a big Shirley Chisholm fan? Me!

No matter how many political obstacles she faced, Shirley never gave up on voting, running for office, and engaging in advocacy.  Shirley Chisholm Democracy Initiative Project.

Stay tuned for the Shirley Chisholm Democracy Initiative events and resources!

Thank you for being Nevadans with me,

Sondra

Vote Nevada is now qualified to receive donations through
Smith’s Inspiring Donations; you can read more about how to donate to Vote
Nevada each time you use your Smith’s loyalty card here:  
https://www.smithsfoodanddrug.com/i/community/smiths-inspiring-donations

Vote Nevada is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit civic engagement
organization.  Anyone can become a supporter by emailing 
info@vote-nevada.org;
we have no membership dues. You can now donate to Vote Nevada through
PayPal at 
https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=L423L7FBMMBEA