As a candidate for President, I pledge to…
Your conduct on the campaign trail shows voters where your commitments are for transparency, accountability and ethics…
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If elected President, I will endorse, prioritize and work aggressively to...
Leading our country means leading the way forward for a strong, accessible, and representative democracy for every American…
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By the end of my first year in office, I pledge to…
The next President will have the power to take concrete action that will repair and strengthen our democratic institutions…
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Additional Comments
Common Cause members and the public are interested to know where you stand on additional democracy ideas that some candidates have proposed, like reforming the Supreme Court, lowering the voting age, or expanding voting rights to non-citizens. What do you think about these reforms? And are there any other ways you want to make our democracy more representative, reflective, accessible, or accountable?
Response
I've argued in front of the Supreme Court, and I want to believe that it isn't a political entity and that it doesn't take sides. Senator Mitch McConnell injected an unprecedented amount of partisan politics into the Supreme Court when he refused to hold a hearing for Merrick Garland, damaging the institution's credibility in the eyes of the American people. I'm open to discussing different ways we can depoliticize the Supreme Court, including expanding the court. I'm also open to looking at lowering the voting age. At the very least, we should be doing everything we can do to make it easier for people to vote - that includes making Election Day a National Holiday and implementing automatic voter registration and pre-registration for younger, civic-minded folks.

Short Answer
The Question:
Candidate Reponse