I. In Focus This Week

Commentary: Stay Cool

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Lately, the news has been full of stories about people dealing with events that are beyond their control.

Floods in Duluth, wildfires in Colorado, and a fierce, fast thunderstorm called a derecho that cut a swath from the Midwest to the Mid-Atlantic have all tested the will – and patience – of communities across the country.

I’ve been struck throughout these stories, however, by how these communities have come together in the wake of such challenges. Residents are publicly hailing firefighters and other public safety workers for their service, and there were thousands of stories of people in the D.C. area opening their homes to one another to help neighbors cope with a potentially deadly combination of oppressive heat and power outages.

These stories seem even more significant to me lately as an “election geek” because in many ways the field is facing a similar challenge; not a natural disaster, of course, but a rising anger and frustration – almost across the board – about just about every detail of the election process.

Of course, a lot of this is tied up with the ongoing national battle about voter ID, but it also emerges in discussions about federal-state relations, voter registration and voting technology.

As temperatures rise, I’m seeing more and more of the dialogue on all of these issues – on both sides – get sharper and more personal. Indeed, the same kind of angry invective you normally see in most blog comments is beginning to crop up in Twitter exchanges and other places like reader comments on sites like Amazon.com.

Quite simply, this isn’t good; not for the field, and not for democracy overall. There are, undoubtedly, numerous important and powerful issues that are buffeting the field right now – and how those issues are resolved will certainly contribute to the experience and outcome of this November’s election.

But when these debates arise, I hope we can find a way to conduct them – and resolve the underlying problems - by turning to one another and not against.

We must always remember that the American election system has always been the mechanism through which we enable the peaceful transfer of power between groups with different views. Those of us in the field of elections cannot preserve that role if we are contributing to the storm instead of standing strong – and together – against it, even when we disagree about the best way to do so.

Yes, temperatures are rising; and yes, it’s going to get hotter and hotter as November approaches. My plea to you is simple: stay cool.


electionlineWeekly

June 13, 2013

First Person Singular: Larry Lomax
Is that a full-time job? A question I am repeatedly asked

By This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Clark County, Nev. Clerk (retiring)

1997: “All you have to do is put on two elections a year. How hard can that be?” As a 30-year retiring Air Force colonel, I am joking with some fellow instructors at the Air War College as I prepare to leave for my new “civilian” job as the assistant registrar in Clark County, Nevada. I am headed to Las Vegas, cocky, confident and totally unprepared.

Over the next 15 years, I’ll eat those words many times. Read More…

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electionlineToday

June 18, 2013

Justices block law requiring proof-of-citizenship
The Supreme Court ruled on Monday in a 7-to-2 decision that Arizona may not require documentary proof of citizenship from people seeking to vote in federal elections there. Adam Liptak, The New York Times.

Bennett vows to push for voter proof-of-citizenship despite court ruling
Arizona Secretary of State Ken Bennett said late Monday that the state is not about to give up the fight, saying the state would pursue appeals with the Election Assistance Commission and the courts. Evan Bell, Cronkite News.

Cruz to introduce voter ID amendment to counteract Supreme Court ruling
Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) on Monday said he would offer an amendment to the Senate immigration bill to counteract a Supreme Court decision striking down state laws requiring voters to prove their citizenship. Daniel Strauss, The Hill.

Also in electionlineToday news: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Texas and national news (7:45 a.m. 06/18/13).