Oconee and Pickens Counties Subscribed Articles

Oconee and Pickens Counties Subscribed Articles

News

This article was originally published in the Hastings Tribune.

Kansas advocacy groups and Democrats are working to broaden outreach to unaffiliated and young voters this summer to get Kansans to vote against the anti-abortion constitutional amendment on the Aug. 2 ballot.

Lynn Teague, LWVSC VP for State Issues & Advocacy
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The Post & Courier

A CBS News Poll reported on June 26 that 52% of Americans consider the ruling a step backward for our nation, in contrast to 31% who describe it as a step forward, a more than 20-point margin rejecting the direction that the court is taking us in. This decision did not “return abortion decisions to the people” as some have claimed. It took the decision from the people most affected, those who are pregnant and their families, and gave it to state legislatures.

Blog Post

On June 23, 2022, five leaders in the political and equal rights movements came together to discuss the current state of democracy and women's role in advancing it. 

Touching on subjects including voter suppression, empowering underserved communities, and attacks on gender and sex-based equality, the panelists had several messages for women working to defend our democracy.

Public Statement

Columbia, SC, July 5, 2022 - SC House Bill 5399, a “no exceptions” abortion bill, prohibits all pregnancy terminations in all circumstances. The League of Women Voters of South Carolina opposes this bill.

The League affirms the right of all people in our country to make their own reproductive choices. In Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) took the right for people to make their own decisions and gave it to state governments.

Columbia, SC rally for reproductive rights
Blog Post

With the end of Roe v. Wade federal constitutional protections for reproductive rights, the SC Governor has called for a no-exceptions abortion ban, even for the life of the mother. In the House, Jay Lucas and others have filed anti-abortion bill H.5399. It is a placeholder but would “prohibit abortions in the State of South Carolina” without exceptions.

LWVSC 2022 Legislative Update
Blog Post

The 2021-22 legislative session has been a roller coaster ride. Now that the regular session is largely over — although special summer sessions loom to complete the budget and to attempt to pass a draconian abortion prohibition bill — we can, with the help of our advocates Lynn Teague and Janelle Rivers, assess the winners and losers.

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The Post & Courier

Happy primary day, South Carolina! It doesn’t have quite the cachet of Election Day, but it’s every bit as important — in many cases more important. And as the S.C. League of Women Voters’ Nancy Williams put it recently, it’s sort of like the Fourth of July: “a patriotic reminder of our country’s almost 250 years of government of, by, and for the people.”

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The Post & Courier

If the problem is that you don’t feel like you know enough about the candidates to cast an informed ballot (and you really shouldn’t vote if you don’t), the League of Women Voters of South Carolina can help. LWVSC and its local affiliates are in their fifth year of participating in the national league’s Vote411 candidate guide, available at vote411.org, to provide basic voter information about our elections.

The site will also show you your ballot, your polling place and other election basics, but its main role is to provide information about the candidates.

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The Post & Courier

We tend to agree at least initially with a warning from the League of Women Voters of South Carolina. It’s advising us not to mail in our votes but instead to cast them in person, since voting in person is far less likely to involve a mistake that would get the vote tossed out.

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The Post & Courier

Columbia, May 18, 2022- Early voting for the upcoming primaries kicks off May 31 across South Carolina under a new law celebrated by leaders in both parties as making it easier to cast a ballot while assuring it’s counted correctly. The law also requires post-election audits to ensure results spit out by a machine match voters’ intention. It’s a provision applauded by the League of Women Voters.

One of the changes that’s brought concern from voting rights activists is a new limitation on the number of absentee ballots that someone can return in person to their county office. Under the law, a voter can hand-deliver their own and up to five others. Teague said that could complicate efforts to ensure people in nursing homes, assisted-living centers and other congregate settings get to vote.

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