Skip to content
The Nexus
DossierENTITY

Goldman School of Public Policy

Coverage of Goldman School of Public Policy in the Nexus archive.

Earliest in view: Jun 29 · 14:16 UTCMost recent: Jul 1 · 21:26 UTC
Co-mentioned in this coverage
Recent coverage
  • POLITICSJul 1 · 21:26 UTCMISSOURI INDEPENDENT
    More states tighten voting rules ahead of midterm elections

    Nine states, including Florida, Utah, and Mississippi, have enacted voting laws this year that impose stricter requirements for state and local elections, drawing criticism for potentially disenfranchising eligible voters. Proponents argue the laws protect election integrity, while opponents claim they disproportionately burden marginalized groups. A Utah review found only 27 noncitizen voters out of 2 million registered voters.

  • POLITICSJul 1 · 07:20 UTCOHIO CAPITAL JOURNAL
    More states tighten voting rules ahead of midterm elections

    Nine U.S. states (Florida, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Utah, and West Virginia) have enacted laws to restrict voting access, with proponents arguing these measures enhance election integrity. Critics, including organizations like the Southern Poverty Law Center, contend the laws disproportionately disenfranchise eligible voters, particularly marginalized groups. Key figures such as Florida's Ron DeSantis and Utah's Deidre Henderson support the policies, while advocates like Sonya Williams Barnes of the Southern Poverty Law Center highlight concerns over noncitizen voting and voter suppression.

  • POLITICSJun 29 · 14:16 UTCMICHIGAN ADVANCE
    More states tighten voting rules ahead of midterm elections

    At least nine states, including Florida, Utah, and Mississippi, have enacted voting laws this year that restrict access to voting, citing election integrity. Critics argue these laws disproportionately burden older voters, people with disabilities, and others with name discrepancies, while supporters claim they prevent noncitizen voting, which data shows is rare.