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U.S. Election: Election Bites

Grab your lunch and join 麻豆传媒色情片 for 10-minute interviews with election experts on some of the most pressing U.S. election issues.


Carter Center Democracy Program
Panelist: Amb. Urszula Gacek, Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
Election observers issue recommendations for how to improve future elections. But do these really bring about change—especially in the U.S.?
 


Democracy Program
Panelist: Kevin Johnson, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team
With the 2020 census complete, it will soon be time for states to redraw congressional and state legislative districts. How does this process work—and how should it work?



Democracy Program
Panelist: Lia Merivaki, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team
Now that the 2020 cycle is over, everyone is talking about improving future elections. But improvement is in the eye of the beholder. Can we find a happy medium between making it easier to vote and holding secure elections? Can't integrity and access go hand in hand?



Democracy Program
Panelist: Larry Garber, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team
The 2020 races are finally in the rearview mirror. Time to take a few minutes to look at what went well, what pandemic innovations we might want to keep, and what needs improvement.



Panelist: Michael Baldassaro, Carter Center Consultant
A member of a Carter Center team that has been monitoring U.S. social media for disinformation, hate speech, and violent rhetoric will share key findings.



Panelist: Larry Garber, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team
On Jan. 6, Congress meets to read out the slate of electors from each state and tally the Electoral College votes. This process is a formality, but it promises to offer a little more drama than usual this year. Just before the process kicks off, learn a little about what can and can’t happen.



Panelist: Kevin Johnson, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team
Georgians return to the voting booth Jan. 5 to settle two of the most hotly contested Senate races in history. Did you know Georgia is one of the only states that holds runoffs? Why? And how does it work in other places? What’s likely to happen if these races end up as close as Georgia’s presidential race?


Panelist: Nathan Stock, Carter Center Conflict Resolution Program Consultant
Polarization. Dehumanization. Disinformation. Though November’s election was largely violence free, all the factors that made many worry about the possibility of violence still exist. With all eyes on Georgia’s Senate runoff, our conflict resolution expert discusses these factors and what we can do about them.



Panelist: 
Kevin Johnson, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team
On Dec. 14, electors will meet in their states to vote for president and vice president, a key step in one of the most unusual election systems in the world. Join us for a discussion of our peculiar institution and the proposals to make it better reflect the will of the people.



Panelist: Lia Merivaki, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team
On the last day to register to vote for Georgia’s Senate runoffs, our expert takes a look at how voter registration works, including the way that voter rolls are cleaned, the safeguards in place to help ensure that the voters on the books are indeed living humans who legally reside in Georgia, and more.



Larry Garber, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team
Election season is winding down, but there are still important steps ahead. Next week brings the safe harbor deadline, and the week after, states' electors cast their votes. But what is a safe harbor deadline? Who chooses state electors? And how does the Electoral College even work?



Avery Davis-Roberts, Carter Center Democracy Program
The right to cast ballots in secret is a basic election principle. But did you know this wasn’t always so in America? Learn more about the history of ballot secrecy and its relationship to voter intimidation and vote buying – and how ballot secrecy is protected in today’s world of voting machines and mail-in ballots.



Lia Merivaki, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team
What’s the difference between a legal and illegal ballot? Why did vote counting take so long in some states but seem to go so quickly in others? What happens when fraud is alleged? With rumors flying, where can voters turn for accurate information? Get answers to these and other questions and find out how to be a more educated voter.



Kevin Johnson, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team

As the initial vote counting wraps up, talk turns to recounts and audits. Nearly half of all states do automatic recounts if the margin of victory is below .25 or .5 percent; in others, losers must request and pay for recounts. But what exactly are officials counting? And what’s the difference between a recount and a postelection audit?



Nathan Stock, Carter Center Conflict Resolution Program Consultant
The possibility of election-related violence is making headlines nationwide, and the Center is partnering with grassroots organizations to offer conflict prevention training and disseminate messages supporting a peaceful electoral transition. Learn what community and faith leaders can do to mitigate possible violence.



Tammy Patrick, Senior Advisor, Democracy Fund
Patrick spent 11 years as an election official in Maricopa County, Arizona, and now provides election officials across the country with the knowledge and tools they need to best serve voters. She’ll offer an inside look at some of the safeguards in place to make sure that absentee ballots don’t get lost, that citizens vote once and only once, and that counting procedures are accurate.



Larry Garber, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team
What is likely to happen after the polls close? Find out what many people are saying about how long we’ll have to wait for results, the likely spread of disinformation, and the possibility of election-related court cases in the days and weeks after Nov. 3.



David Carroll, Director, Carter Center Democracy Program
Carroll has been involved in about 80 of the Center’s 111 election missions. Hear what he has to say about international election standards and how the U.S. does and doesn’t measure up to those, and what the 2020 U.S. election has in common with some of the 39 other countries in which we’ve worked.



Lia Merivaki, Carter Center U.S. Election Expert Study Team
Learn more about the various kinds of observers you may see at the polls on the Election Day – their goals, what they can observe, and what rules are in place to help ensure that they can promote transparency in our election processes without subjecting voters or election workers to intimidation.

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