What is the League of Women Voters?

What is the League of Women Voters?

Bucks County Women's Journal.  The only educational newspaper serving the women of Bucks County
Type: 
News
by Jean Weston, LWVBC Member 
(as published in the December 2024/January 2025 Bucks County Women's Journal)
 
The League of Women Voters believes in the power of women to create a more perfect democracy. That has been our vision since 1920, when the LWV was founded by leaders of the women’s suffrage movement. For 104 years, we have been a nonpartisan, activist, grassroots organization that believes voters should play a critical role in democracy.
 
1920 - February 14 - LWV Founded
The League was officially founded in Chicago in 1920. It was formed by the suffragists of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, and it began as a “mighty political experiment” designed to help 20 million women carry out their new responsibilities as voters.
 
1920 - August 26 - 19th Amendment Ratified
After the 19th Amendment passed in the House and Senate, its final hurdle was to be ratified by the states. As anti-suffrage groups still fought to oppose ratification, suffrage leaders mobilized to continue their pressure campaign in the states. Finally, the Amendment was ratified in Tennessee and officially made law on August 26.
 
1944 - 1945 UN Established & LWV Named NGO Observer
After World War II, the League carried out a nationwide public support campaign, at the request of President Franklin Roosevelt, to establish the United Nations and to ensure US participation. Following the campaign, President Harry Truman invited the League to serve as a consultant to the US delegation at the United Nations Charter Conference. One of the first organizations officially recognized by the UN as a non-governmental organization (NGO), the League still maintains official observer status today.
 
1957 - LWV Education Fund Established
As the League became more active in issue advocacy, the need arose for a separate organizational arm for activities like voter registration and information. The League of Women Voters Education Fund was established to encourage the active and informed participation of citizens in government and to increase understanding of major public policy issues.
 
1972 - Major Campaign to Ratify the ERA
In 1972, shortly after congressional passage of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), LWV voted officially to support “equal rights for all regardless of sex.” The League followed this vote with a nationwide pressure campaign that continued through the 1970s. That national campaign ended in 1982, but LWV continues to push for ERA ratification today.
 
1974 - Men Invited to Join the League
The League of Women Voters voted to admit men to full membership but chose to retain the word “women” in the title as a token of respect to the original founders.
 
1976 - Emmy Award for Presidential Debates
The League sponsored the first televised presidential debates since 1960, for which it received an Emmy award for Outstanding Achievement in Broadcast Journalism. It continued to sponsor televised general election Presidential debates in 1980 and 1984, focusing on nonpartisan issues with a main goal of informing voters. As candidates demanded increasingly partisan conditions, however, the League withdrew its sponsorship of general election debates in 1988.
 
1993 - “National Voter Registration Act” Becomes Law
The League’s grassroots campaign for national legislation to reform voter registration resulted in passage of the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA), also known as the “motor-voter” bill. The goal: increase accessibility to the electoral process. The motor-voter bill enabled citizens to register at motor vehicle agencies automatically, as well as by mail and at agencies that service the public.
 
2002 - The “Help America Vote Act” Becomes Law
When the 2000 election exposed the many problems facing the election system, the League began to work on election reform. Working closely with a civil rights coalition, LWV helped draft and pass the Help America Vote Act (HAVA), which established provisional balloting, requirements for updating voting systems, and the Election Assistance Commission.
 
2006 LWV Launches VOTE411.org
The League provided a dedicated website for voter information as early as the 1990s. In 2006, the League launched the next generation of online voter education with VOTE411.org, a “one-stop-shop” for election-related information. Today, VOTE411 provides both general and state-specific nonpartisan resources to the voting public, including a nationwide polling place locator, a ballot lookup tool, candidate positions on issues, and more.
 
2019 LWV Launches People Powered Fair Maps Campaign
In June 2019, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that partisan gerrymandering cannot be solved by the federal courts. In response, the League initiated People Powered Fair Maps™, a coordinated effort across all 50 states and D.C. to create fair and transparent, people-powered redistricting processes to eliminate partisan and racial gerrymandering nationwide.
 
2020 - LWV Celebrated 100 Years
On February 14th, 2020, the League of Women Voters marked its 100th anniversary of empowering voters and defending democracy. Over that time, it fought for election protection, democratic reforms, and equal access to the ballot—all while maintaining its commitment to nonpartisanship and fostering an informed electorate.
 
2024 and Beyond, What Will the Next 100 Years Hold?
The League of Women Voters has evolved from a mighty political experiment designed to help 20 million newly enfranchised women vote in 1920 to a nonpartisan organization that is a recognized force in molding political leaders, shaping public policy, and promoting informed civic participation.
 
Join us as we move into the future.  Join the League of Women Voters of Bucks County today!

 

League to which this content belongs: 
Bucks County