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What to Do and See This Summer

Don't miss TUTS's "Rock of the Ages" and the reopening of The Children's Museum, plus a group exhibition assembled by CAMH’s Teen Council offers a revealing look into young people's inner lives through the pandemic.

A Kentucky Surprise: Bipartisan Reforms to Ease Voting

A Kentucky Surprise: Bipartisan Reforms to Ease Voting What’s different about Kentucky—and what could other states learn? Darron Cummings/AP Photo Spencer Crabtree, left, receives instructions from David Lee Mitchell before Crabtree marks his ballot at the Kentucky Exposition Center, on Election Day, November 3, 2020, in Louisville, Kentucky. The onslaught of voter suppression bills introduced by Republicans in state legislatures around the country has evoked intense opposition from the whole non-MAGA world. Protests have erupted, and lawsuits have been filed, often within minutes of passage, against these new restrictions. Watching this, it is tempting to completely write off the possibility of any bipartisan work on voting and democracy issues. The savaging of Liz Cheney in the Republican conference produces that same feeling. But just as there are rumblings of Republican resistance to the Trumpist takeover, there are also Republicans in the elections realm willing t

How This Red State Expanded Voting Access

How This Red State Expanded Voting Access Many Republican states have restricted voting options, but Kentucky is charting a path that once looked impossible. Can anyone else follow? Jon Cherry via Getty Images Election officials chat in the polling area in the Kentucky Center for African American Heritage on Nov. 3, 2020, in Louisville, Kentucky. This story was co-published in partnership with the On the afternoon of Jan. 21, a group of public officials gathered in Kentucky’s Capitol in Frankfort for a delicate conversation about changing how the state conducts elections. Masked and spread out in a room typically used for committee hearings, they didn’t have much time. 

Tight deadline, savvy pitch: How one red state expanded access to the ballot – Center for Public Integrity

Introduction On the afternoon of January 21, a group of public officials gathered in Kentucky’s Capitol in Frankfort for a delicate conversation about changing how the state conducts elections. Masked and spread out in a room typically used for committee hearings, they didn’t have much time.  There were only 22 days left in the legislative session.  Investigations in your inbox Email address The group included state legislators, Secretary of State Michael Adams, Republican and Democratic elected county clerks, representatives of the state elections board and (virtually) a staff member for U.S. Sen. Rand Paul. They took turns laying out what the executive director of the state elections board described as a “hodgepodge” of priorities increasing voter access among them that somehow had to evolve into a bill that could pass. Everyone put their wish lists on the table. 

Franck Thilliez: tournage imminent pour la série «Le Syndrome E», d après le roman

Franck Thilliez: tournage imminent pour la série «Le Syndrome E», d après le roman
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