Our mission is to advance racial equity by transforming electoral systems.

More Equitable Democracy is a racial justice organization working to advance racial equity through electoral reform.

By joining More Equitable Democracy, you become part of a growing community dedicated to advancing racial equity through transformative electoral reforms. Together, we work to empower marginalized voices, champion inclusive democracy, and push for systems like proportional representation that ensure every vote counts.

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    The Role of Democracy

    Proportional Representation

    Proportional representation can transform our democracy by creating a government, and possibly new political parties, that accurately reflects all of our communities, values, and issues.

    Winner-Takes-All

    Using winner-take-all systems to elect our legislative bodies leaves too many of us unrepresented and unheard. Proportional representation means a government that accurately reflects the range of communities, ideas, and concerns in the United States.

    Principle of Proportionality

    The principle of proportionality holds that the number of seats won should be based on the number of votes won. Guided by that principle, we can connect voting rights with representation and truly transform our communities.

    Breaking Down Representation

    From school board to Congress, too many elected officials don’t look like or share the values of the communities they represent. This disconnect has nothing to do with people and everything to do with winner-take-all elections.
    Most elections in the US are winner-take-all, whether we’re choosing just one winner at a time, or multiple winners in a single contest.
    Either way, the winners take all the representation, leaving others, even with as much as 49% of the vote share, with none.
    This creates a fictional divide, leads to a two-party system that minimizes racial and economic issues, and wastes the votes of millions of people.

    Decades of Stagnation: The State of
    Voting Rights Since 1856

    1856

    The last of the states’ property requirements abolished

    1870

    African American men won the right to vote through the 15th amendment

    1920

    Women won the right to vote through the 19th amendment

    1924

    All native Americans won the right to US citizenship

    1964

    24th amendment prohibited poll taxes in federal elections

    1965

    The Voting Rights Act outlawed discriminatory voting requirements

    1971

    26th amendment lowered voting age from 21 to 18

    1982

    Amendments to the federal Voting Rights Act outlaw discriminatory voting practices, independent of intent

    1996-2018

    States restore felon voting rights

    The right to vote must be as real in practice as it is on paper. Many hard-fought and hard-won advances have too often been countered by violent opposition, and deliberate schemes to deny the franchise to people of color, which continue right up to the present day. We must be vigilant in defending these past gains.

    But even a full and unencumbered right to cast a vote doesnt result in meaningful representation for all if its cast under an unfair voting system.

    What comes next?

    We need voting rights and representation for all.

    Uncover the stories of empowerment and progress in our fight for voting rights.

    do the honors,
    hover over the button!

    Read More
    What Eastpointe’s ranked-choice voting means for Black voter rights

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    Editorial: Ranked-choice voting could racially diversify councils

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    What Georgia teaches us about the problems with winner-take-all elections