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Nation has Georgia on its mind, but many states are making voting easier

Nation has Georgia on its mind, but many states are making voting easier There have been efforts by states such as Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Vermont and Virginia to expand voting by mail, early voting and voter registration. In Kentucky, which did not have early voting before the pandemic, the Republican-controlled legislature passed a bipartisan measure that will establish a three-day early voting period.     Ballots collected from drop boxes in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, on Monday, Oct. 5, 2020. [ AMY DAVIS / BALTIMORE SUN | The Baltimore Sun ] Published 2 hours ago Updated 2 hours ago During the waning days of the presidential election, Vermont Democratic state Sen. Cheryl Hooker got a desperate call from one of her constituents: The woman said she had forgotten to sign her name on the absentee ballot, it had been rejected by the town clerk, and she couldn’t fix it.

Thanks to Malinowski for co-sponsoring carbon cashback bill

Many people have recently received stimulus checks from the government for COVID-19 relief. Those checks were popular. How’d you like to receive monthly payments from the government and help climate change at the same time? Sound too good to be true? I want to thank my Congressman, Tom Malinowski (NJ-7) for recently co-sponsoring a bill in Congress called the Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend Act (EICDA). This bill would put a steadily increasing price on carbon pollution; those monies would be returned to American families in the form of a monthly dividend check – a “carbon cashback” so to speak.

Nation Has Georgia on Its Mind but Many States Are Making Voting Easier

Table of Contents Nation Has Georgia on Its Mind, but Many States Are Making Voting Easier A voter in Louisville, Kentucky, votes during November’s presidential election. Kentucky enacted a law this week that adds three days of early voting. Darron Cummings The Associated Press During the waning days of the presidential election, Vermont Democratic state Sen. Cheryl Hooker got a desperate call from one of her constituents: The woman said she had forgotten to sign her name on the absentee ballot, it had been rejected by the town clerk and she couldn’t fix it. This was a familiar story around the country, as the pandemic forced voters and election administrators to take a crash course in mail-in voting.

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