Posts Tagged: ‘elections’

Since it happened over the weekend (a weekend with gorgeous weather and many Halloween parties), you may have missed the coverage of the Rally to Restore Sanity. If you did, here’s a quick recap: About 200,000 to 250,000 people showed up to see the show. The show started at noon with about an hour of [...]

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On Thursday, the National Economic Council (NEC) released its study on Jobs and Economic Security for America’s Women. Its arrival just shy of the November congressional elections — in which, ironically, women politicians are actually poised to lose seats in the Senate for the first time roughly 30 years — isn’t coincidental, either.

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In last Friday’s Guardian, Kira Cochrane lamented the minimal gains made by women politicians at the polls. Once the dust had finally settled on the parliamentary elections, only 16 new female representatives picked up seats, boosting the percentage of women MPs to just 22 percent. And to top it off, Prime Minister David Cameron appointed just four women among his 23-person cabinet.

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Tonight from 7 to 8:30 (EST), enjoy a live webcast from The Carter Center. The event is titled “Africa: Elections Aren’t Enough,” and the panel discussion will be led by award-winning author Paul Collier.

You’ll find a link to the webcast on the home page at www.cartercenter.org.

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So you may have heard about the Supreme Court’s recent decision to reverse longstanding limitations that banned corporations from directly contributing financially in elections. It’s kind of a big deal.

As reported in the Washington Post, for a few decades now, corporations have been limited to contributing to political action committees, which have set limits of $5,000 per calendar year, and kept corporations away from contributing to a candidate directly. Of course, there are always loopholes: Corporations have a way of strongly suggesting to its rising stars that contributing to a certain campaign would probably be good for the old career. Maybe even those employees’ bonuses later in the year will reflect an additional amount of the same sum they contributed. So you’ve got a few execs writing $5,000 checks to a Political Action Committee. It’s disingenuous, but tolerable. The limits for individual campaigns are even narrower: $2,400 per candidate, per election.

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