
One Person, One Vote: American Democracy and The Fight for Structural Reform
Tuesday, October 4, 2022
4:15 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Stokes Hall STO 131 Stokes Auditorium
10/04/2022 04:15 PM
America/New_York
One Person, One Vote: American Democracy and The Fight for Structural Reform
Stokes Hall
Contact
Carpenter, Allison
Type
Audience
- Alumni
- Faculty and Staff
- General Public
- Students
Event Calendar
As the United States nears its 250th birthday, whether we can achieve the
founding aspiration of political equality is an open question. The
Electoral College, the Congress, the Supreme Court, and state
legislatures nationwide face challenges crying out for solutions. Join
organizers, activists, scholars, and lawyers who have spent decades
advancing the fight for an America that honors a simple and
straightforward democratic principle: one person, one vote.
- Why do we elect the president
with an Electoral College system that values voters in “swing states”
more than voters in “safe states”? - How has gerrymandering changed the nature of the “People’s House” and state legislatures, and how might it be fixed?
- Fourteen states are expected to
hold 70 percent of the US population by 2040. Is the Senate's model of
representation, which gives every state two votes regardless of
population, still relevant? - In a representative democracy,
how is it that one of our three powerful branches - the Supreme Court -
is led by a majority that has been appointed by presidents who lost the
popular vote? - How can we pass major structural reform through teetering institutions during dangerously polarized times?
Speakers Include:
- Representative Malcolm Kenyatta, Pennsylvania State Legislature, District 181
- Rob Richie ‘86, President and CEO, FairVote
- Cynthia Richie Terrel, Executive Director, RepresentWomen
- Armin Samii, March on Harrisburg