Even now, more than 50 years since the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (5065), this is one of the broadest civil rights laws, and the colorful people throughout the United States are still fighting to protect the voting rights . Vote on the ground and a mighty woman working vigorously in the courtroom to confirm that they are not deprived of this right
When the major part of the voting rights bill is canceled in 2013, some states have a history of racial discrimination trying to pass the law that further restricts voting rights immediately. This is done in the form of a window that restricts voter registration, clears the voter's inactive history, and requests a more rigorous form of identification. There are currently 23 states with such voter restrictions. As she helped the vote of a few Ohio voters, the short film follows the civil rights attorney Donita Judge. This documentary shows how many hoops must be jumped by a simple vote and emphasizes that the screams of voter fraud are exaggerated.
Documentary film "Gideon's Army" in 2013 was awarded the Sundance Film Festival Editorial Prize, was nominated for Independent Spirit Award and Emmy Awards, and later aired on HBO. A movie before dawn is "a rise: a commitment of the guardian of my brother", a documentary documenting President Barack Obama 's successful plan to help boys and boys, and a documentary on "exploring the regulation of the law of the South abortion clinic" trap". Impact "Trap" was premiered at the Sundance Film Festival 2016 and received the Special Jury Award for Film Production with a Social Impact. Her most recent project "Bobby Kennedy for the President" premiered at Netflix earlier this year.
Statement by FILMMAKER: "As a lawyer and filmmaker, I am particularly interested in telling stories about how the legal system affects daily life in daily life, information and new perspectives. "
My poll is a major voter initiative for students at the University of Pennsylvania State University Kensington and attracts the attention of many communities http://triblive.com/news/valleynewsdispatch/10036354-74/vote -matters-students. Students held a project on February 3 where local four politicians discussed the reasons for voting with the students. Students created a video that debuted at the event http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6dZPVssYadg & feature = youtu.be
Voting is a refereed academic journal aimed at "promoting understanding of the priority voting system". Originally issued by the Election Reform Association (1994-2003), voting became a publication of McDougall Trust in April 2013. The magazine's founding editor-in-chief (1994 - 2010) is a British mathematician, computer scientist Brian Wichmann, then Nicolaus Tidman. Most ballot papers include a single negotiable voting (STV) priority voting system. This journal also reissued several groundbreaking papers on STV, written by Thomas Hare, Henry Richmond Droop, and Brian Meek. Other papers such as "Condorcet-Hare hybrid scheme for single winner election" which is a mixed voting scheme including partially merged STV
Axios recently announced an article titled "Reasons to vote," point out that only 80,000 votes have hindered President Hillary Clinton and further promoted the dramatic liberalization of the Supreme Court. This means that each vote must be significant then such a few votes may be the result of this. Professor of economics at George Mason University, Brian Kaplan, explained mathematics. He pointed out that the possibility of voting is extremely small, because if the vote changes election results, the two main candidates must be within one vote. Even if Clinton won 4,000,000 votes in Florida and Trump won 4,000,002 votes, there is no problem with drawing leverage. As Kaplan said: