
On the heels of a New Year and new Congress, groups nationwide are convening to talk about electoral reform. FairVote executive director Rob Richie is making several lectures in early 2007.
Richie made a lunchtime address on January 17 at Kent State University in Ohio. The event was2008 and Beyond: The Future of Election and Ethics Reform in the States. On February 11, he'll sit on a panel of election reform advocates before the National Association of Secretaries of State. NASS' annual meeting will be at the Hyatt Regency on Capitol Hill. Richie travels to North Carolina State University on April 18 to give the political science department's annual Abraham Holtzman lecture. He will speak to several classes there on April 17.
[ More on upcoming FairVote events ][ Read Rob Richie's speech at Kent State (PDF 331k) ]





We join the nation in paying our respects to Gerald Ford, the 38th president of the United States (1974-1977), who died on December 26, 2006. President Ford backed an ambitious array of electoral reforms. As minority leader of the U.S. House of Representatives, Ford in 1965 voted for the historic Voting Rights Act. In 1969, he joined an overwhelming majority of House Members in voting for a direct, national vote for president; in his floor speech, he explained direct election was good for all Americans and all states and finished with: "Now, my final point is this: I believe that we ought to pass the direct method of selecting the President of the United States. If we do not, it is my honest opinion that the people will be let down." As president, he signed into law the Federal Election Campaign Act Amendments of 1974.
