LWV National Convention in Washington, D.C.
by Anne Stone
The convention was held June 27-30 in Washington, D.C. and was the 56th biennial convention and was both in-person and virtual.There were both voting delegates and observers.
Our Orange Coast League had the following representatives: Linda Moon, Susan Knight and Deborah Hanlan were in person delegates, Anne Stone was a virtual delegate, Karen Williams and Diane Nied were virtual observers.
The League Education and Advocacy program for 2024-26 was approved by the delegates.
• Re-adoption of the Campaign for Making Democracy Work® as recommended program for 2024-2026, which includes redistricting reform, voting rights protection, improving elections, money in politics and direct election of the president by popular vote.
• Retention of all LWVUS positions in the areas of Representative Government, International Relations, Natural Resources and Social Policy as outlined in Impact on Issues (link).
• Concurrence with the LWV of Washington State position on Decline of Local News and Its Impact on Democracy, which includes a variety of approaches to address this decline.
• LWVUS-wide study on the Federal Judiciary.
The delegates also approved the following Resolutions:
The LWVUS
-
Strongly supports legislation that will establish statehood for the People of the District of Columbia.
-
Reaffirms its commitment to fight for reproductive rights and justice, and against disinformation on this issue.
-
Resolves that public libraries are essential institutions for strong, viable and sustainable democracies.
-
Reaffirms its immigration position calling for fair and humane immigration reform
-
Commits continuing support for the CEDAW (Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women) framework at the local, state and national level
-
Recognizes the importance of ethics in government policies that apply broadly to all branches of government