From open primaries to ranked-choice voting, conversations about these ideas are good for democracy.
By Jeff Greenburg
Ahead of 2024, GOP launches ‘Bank Your Vote’
The RNC will make a belated effort to embrace mail-in voting.
By Linda Stein
Election advisory board agnostic on voter ID
The Pennsylvania Department of State and the Election Law Advisory Board appear uninterested in the problem.
By Anthony Hennen
Guy Ciarrocchi: Ranked choice voting encourages chaos and undermines democracy
Whatever you think of the problems of our voting system, the answer is not ranked choice voting.
By Guy Ciarrocchi
Arnaud Armstrong: To win again, Pennsylvania Republicans need to compete in mail-in voting
The party’s refusal to match Democratic efforts in the mail-in vote will continue to needlessly cost them victories.
By Arnaud Armstrong
Some Pennsylvanians’ DMV data was transferred to a nonprofit due to membership in multistate voter database project
Republicans in the legislature say that the nonprofit organization has strayed from its traditional mission and into partisan politics.
By Todd Shepherd
Terry Tracy: Democrats claim “unfettered discretion” over Republican nominees to Delco Election Board
Delaware County is the only county in Pennsylvania that permits complete one-party rule. Now, they’ve claimed even more “unfettered” power.
By Terry Tracy
Sen. Tracy Pennycuick: Pennsylvania must join the majority of states and nations with voter ID laws
Most democracies — including most American states — protect the right to vote by requiring identification.
By Sen. Tracy Pennycuick
Andy Bloom: The October Surprise to bring independents to the GOP
Focusing on policy, not investigations and payback, will inspire independents to take the Republicans’ side.
By Andy Bloom
Don’t call it an “early voting center” — how Philly election officials changed their verbiage on 2020 voting sites in court
Internal emails obtained by Broad + Liberty suggest that city officials knew full well they were creating “early voting centers” … but called them “board offices” to slip by the courts.
By Todd Shepherd