How to Make Sure Your Vote Counts in Louisiana This November Thrillist
How to Make Sure Your Vote Counts in Louisiana This November - ThrillistSkip to main contentLike Thrillist on Facebook.Follow Thrillist on Instagram.Follow Thrillist on Twitter.Follow Thrillist on Snapchat.Subscribe to Thrillist on YouTube.Follow Thrillist on TikTok.SUBSCRIBEGo to NavigationNew OrleansLifestyleThings To Do
Lambert Boissiere III (D) including Willie Jones, Davante Lewis, Gregory Manning, and Jesse T. Thompson. Mandie Landry (D) and Royce Duplessis (D) are fighting to fill the position vacated by 23-year veteran Karen Carter Peterson for State Senator 5th Senatorial District, a special election with no runoff. Derek Russ (D) is attempting to unseat Mark J. Shea (D) for Municipal and Traffic Court Division D Judge. For Municipal and Traffic Court Division E Judge, it’s between Geoffrey L. Gates (D) and Bobbie Smith (D). For 1st City Court Clerk, Donna Glapion (D) is attempting to take over for Austin Badon (D). And Patrice Sentino (D) is vying for Leila J. Eames’ (D) seat as a Member of School Board District 1. The City Of NOLA
Your Guide to the Midterm Election in New Orleans This November
Everything you need to know to make sure your vote counts in 2022
By Megan Braden-Perry Published on 9/30/2022 at 3:45 PMSouthern University and A&M College - Baton Rouge, LA The 2022 Midterm Election is coming up on Tuesday, November 8, with all 435 seats in the House of Representatives and 35 of the 100 seats in the Senate up for grabs across the nation. In Louisiana, there’s the Open Congressional Primary and New Orleans residents are voting on statewide, parishwide, and limited jurisdiction positions and propositions. One item of note—that highlights why it's so important to cast your vote—is the 2022 Louisiana congressional redistricting following the 2020 census. Though Louisiana’s population is about one-third Black, the redistricting resulted in only one staunchly Democratic majority Black district out of six. This was essentially the same representation as before, despite an increasing Black population, and many agree that it’s racial gerrymandering which goes against the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The Louisiana legislature drew a redistricting map. Governor John Bel Edwards vetoed it on the grounds that it didn’t add a second majority-minority district, representative of the state’s current demographics. The Louisiana legislature overrode the governor’s veto. Civil Rights groups and Black voters filed a federal lawsuit (Robinson et al v. Ardoin). Then there was a hearing, appeal, special session, administrative stay, another special session, House Bills, testimonies, more special sessions, another stay, an amicus curiae brief (Alabama’s Merrill v. Milligan)—months of back and forth. The U.S. Supreme Court will hear Merrill v. Milligan on October 4, once the new term has begun, with a ruling anticipated for spring 2023. That, unfortunately, won’t affect the current election but will hopefully result in fair representation from 2023 and beyond.Thrillist TVWine and CheeseburgerWine and Cheeseburger: Harley and Lara Pair Falafel with Wine The City Of NOLAWhat s on the ballot
On New Orleans’ November 8, 2022 ballot, there are eight constitutional amendments, a parishwide amendment, U.S. Senator, U.S. Representative 1st Congressional District or U.S. Representative 2nd Congressional District, Court of Appeal 4th Circuit at Large Judge, Public Service Commissioner District 3, Municipal and Traffic Court Division D Judge, Municipal and Traffic Court Division E Judge, and 1st City Court Clerk. You can see your exact ballot using the Geaux Vote app or on the Louisiana Secretary of State’s voting portal. Many ballots will include State Senator 5th Senatorial District, a special election with no runoff, to fill the position vacated by 23-year veteran Karen Carter Peterson. Some will include Member of School Board District 1, Delachaise Security and Improvement District Proposition, Huntsville Security and Neighborhood Improvement District Proposition, and/or Lake Oaks Subdivision Improvement District Proposition. One of the eight Louisiana constitutional amendments, Constitutional Amendment 7 (slavery), on the ballot posits adding language to Article I, Section 3 (Right to Dignity) that would eliminate involuntary servitude as punishment for crime. The Louisiana constitution currently reads, “Slavery and involuntary servitude are prohibited, except in the latter case as punishment for crime.” Amendment 7, if passed, would delete the exception and prohibit it altogether. This matters because many Louisianians are in correctional facilities, where they are working constantly for little or no pay. According to Prison Policy, Louisiana incarcerates more of its citizens than any other democracy. According to the Louisiana ACLU, prisoners earn between $0.02 and $0.40 per hour. They are working some of the same jobs as people outside of prison, for a fraction of the pay. At Louisiana State Penitentiary, better known as Angola, prisoners work land on a former plantation, with the same crops as during slavery, for only two cents an hour. The crops’ yield is often sold to big companies, at a normal rate.Who s Running
For the U.S. Senate seat 13 candidates are on the ballot including Beryl A. Billiot (No Party), Gary Chambers Jr., (D), Devin Lance Graham (R), “Xan” John, (O), John Kennedy (R - incumbent), W. Thomas La Fontaine Olson (No Party), Bradley McMorris (I), MV “Vinny” Mendoza (D), “Luke” Mixon (D), Salvador P. Rodriguez (D), Aaron C. Sigler (L), Syrita Steib (D), and Thoman Wenn (Other). Katie Darling (D) and Howard Kearney (L) are vying to unseat Steve Scalise (R) for U.S. Representative 1st Congressional District. And, for U.S. Representative 2nd Congressional District, Troy A. Carter (Democrat - incumbent) is up against “Dan” Lux (R). For the Court of Appeal 4th Circuit at Large Judge seat, the choices are “Joseph” Cao (R), Karen Herman (D), and Marie Williams (D). Four other democrats are attempting to unseat Public Service Commissioner District 3 incumbentLambert Boissiere III (D) including Willie Jones, Davante Lewis, Gregory Manning, and Jesse T. Thompson. Mandie Landry (D) and Royce Duplessis (D) are fighting to fill the position vacated by 23-year veteran Karen Carter Peterson for State Senator 5th Senatorial District, a special election with no runoff. Derek Russ (D) is attempting to unseat Mark J. Shea (D) for Municipal and Traffic Court Division D Judge. For Municipal and Traffic Court Division E Judge, it’s between Geoffrey L. Gates (D) and Bobbie Smith (D). For 1st City Court Clerk, Donna Glapion (D) is attempting to take over for Austin Badon (D). And Patrice Sentino (D) is vying for Leila J. Eames’ (D) seat as a Member of School Board District 1. The City Of NOLA