[EL] Joan Growe on Turnout
Abu El-Haj,Tabatha
taa53 at drexel.edu
Tue Sep 22 14:50:23 PDT 2020
Thanks so much for posting this to the list. I think it is super important to start thinking more seriously about where democracy is working well in the United States. Voter turnout is one measure, although it would be even better to know whether high voter turnout correlates with better governance (responsiveness, efficiency).
Tabatha Abu El-Haj
Professor of Law
[cid:image001.jpg at 01D69108.D81EEE80]<https://name-coach.com/tabatha-abuel-haj>
Drexel University
Thomas R. Kline School of Law
3320Market Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Tel: 215.571-4738
drexel.edu/kline<applewebdata://E9899F64-0BC2-4F6C-B988-D18EBA348EDD/drexel.edu/law>
View my research on my SSRN Author Page:
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=1418850
From: Law-election <law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu> on behalf of RuthAlice Anderson <ruthalice.anderson at comcast.net>
Date: Tuesday, September 22, 2020 at 5:27 PM
To: Election Law Listserv <law-election at uci.edu>
Subject: [EL] Joan Growe on Turnout
External.
I was looking at the new releases from the Minnesota Historical Society Press and saw that former Secretary of State Joan Growe wrote a book on increasing turnout. It came out last month. Since so much of election law interest is focused on turnout, I thought folks might be interested.
RuthAlice
Here is the description:
High voter turnout in Minnesota is no accident. It arose from the traditions of this state’s early Yankee and northern European immigrants, and it has been sustained by wisely chosen election policies. Many of these policies were designed and implemented during the twenty-four-year tenure of Minnesota secretary of state Joan Anderson Growe.
In inspiring and often funny prose, Growe recounts the events that framed her life and changed the state’s voting practices. She grew up in a household that never missed an election. After an astounding grassroots feminist campaign, she was elected to the state legislature in 1972; two years later, she was elected secretary of state, the state’s chief elections administrator. As one of the nation’s leading advocates for reliable elections and convenient voting, Growe worked with county officials to secure Election Day registration (used for the first time in 1974) as a Minnesota norm. She brought new technology into elections administration and promoted motor voter registration. And as an ardent feminist, she has encouraged and inspired scores of other women to run for office.
Part political history and part memoir, this book is a reminder to Minnesotans to cherish and protect their tradition of clean, open elections.
https://www.mnhs.org/mnhspress/books/turnout
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