Democracy Happy Hour TODAY @ 5 pm PT/8 pm ET via Zoom! Grab a drink and come hear about the latest democracy news, ongoing efforts to fix democracy, and actions you can take at our weekly Democracy Happy Hour, Wednesdays @ 5 pm PT/8 pm ET. This is an online virtual event via Zoom. Today's topic for October 2, 2024: with Aditi Juneja, Executive Director Democracy 2076 supports the existing democracy space by allowing other organizations to continue to prioritize urgent, short-term needs while participating in coalitions that Democracy 2076 anchors, focused on long-term work. By working long-term to change our Constitution, popular culture, and political coalitions we can have a better democracy in 2076 and have an immediate impact by shifting the window of acceptable ideas to provide the inspirational thought leadership to renew our democracy for the next generation. Aditi Juneja is the Executive Director of Democracy 2076. She was most recently Chief of Staff at the Movement Voter Project and previously spent 4 years at Protect Democracy where she led the work of the National Task Force on Election Crises. Her writing has been featured in Vox, NPR, and Talking Points Memo. She received her J.D. from NYU Law School and a B.A. from Connecticut College. Upcoming Topics: |
|
* NEW DATE! * Tuesday, October 8th at 6 pm PT/9 pm ET |
|
Join us for Civics 101: Branches of Government & Elected Office Positions on October 8th at 6 pm PT/9 pm ET*. This program will cover the branches of government and elected positions at the federal, state and local levels, including the duties and responsibilities of each position. This training is geared to women interested in running for office, but open to all. This program is FREE and sponsored by Fix Democracy First Women in Office Now (WON) project that helps to recruit, train and support women running for office in Washington State. *We received multiple requests to postpone this training, as it conflicted with the Vice Presidential Debate, so we moved it to Tuesday, October 8th. If you already signed up and can't make the new date, we will be recording the event and will send the link to all who registered. We apologize for any inconvenience. |
|
October 13th at 4 pm PT/7 pm ET |
|
Fix Democracy First and The Meaningful Movies Project proudly present an exclusive, free online screening of the thought-provoking documentary, Majority Rules by AJ Schnack. With America's democratic experiment mired in division and dysfunction, the state of Alaska votes to revolutionize their election system. The surprising results spark new alliances, a growing call for election reform, and fierce pushback from political parties. Could changing how Americans vote also change politics for the better? Veteran political documentary filmmaker AJ Schnack (Caucus, Convention) returns to the campaign trail asking whether these new Alaska reforms, an all-candidate open primary and an instant runoff general election, might be a prescription for what ails the American democratic experiment. Traveling across the country, Schnack and his crew interview reform supporters and opponents, looking at where these reforms are already in place and where they may soon be adopted. The resulting film answers two of our nation’s most pressing questions: How did the American electoral system become so dysfunctional, and can changes to how we vote change our entire system for the better? Join us for a panel discussion after the film. Our speakers will be: Jason Grenn is the former Executive Director for Alaskans for Better Elections, an election reform advocacy non-profit. He recently served as an independent State Representative in the Alaska State House where he passed legislation focused on legislative ethics reform and championed economic development for Alaska. Jason was born and raised in Anchorage, Alaska and he and his wife Jana have been married 19 years and are raising three small children. Lisa Ayrault is the Director of FairVote Washington. Lisa Ayrault first learned about ranked-choice voting more than 30 years ago, when she taught a lesson to her middle school students about the mathematics of voting. Lisa holds a B.A. in Philosophy from Stanford University. She and her husband spent two years as Peace Corps volunteers in Niger, Africa. Living under a military dictatorship impressed upon her the imperative to be an active steward of our democracy. |
|
Please support our work to strengthen and defend democracy. We can't do it without you. |
|