I do most of my work with kids. They are the very foundation of our future. We are so incredibly disrespectful to them in America in every way because they can't vote.
In politics women type the letters, lick the stamps, distribute the pamphlets and get out the vote. Men get elected.
We demand that segregation be ended in every school district in the year 1963! We demand that we have effective civil rights legislation - no compromise, no filibuster - and that include public accommodations, decent housing, integrated education, FEPC and the right to vote.
Women, we might as well be dogs baying the moon as petitioners without the right to vote!
Everything in our foreign and domestic policy is a question of issue for the American people to vote on.
Most of the men and women who vote in Congress each year to continue subsidies have taken campaign donations from big energy companies.
Since the 1970s, I have asked students if they would first try to save their drowning dog or a drowning stranger. And for 40 years I have received the same results: One third vote for their dog, one third for the stranger, and one third don't know what they would do.
Every day is Earth Day, and I vote we start investing in a secure climate future right now.
The right to vote is the easiest of all rights to grant.
Economic opportunities will win the women's vote.
Voting has proliferated in the United States, and it has reached a point where there is now almost one vote available per citizen over the age of eighteen.
The one sure way of participating in the process of nation-building is to vote on the election day.
Elections aren't just about who votes but who doesn't vote.
When George Bush asked me to sign on, it obviously wasn't because he was worried about carrying Wyoming. We got 70 percent of the vote in Wyoming, although those three electoral votes turned out to be pretty important last time around.
The way to lessen the grip of the Tea Party on the electoral process would be to do what a handful have done and have a primary where all voters, members of every party, can vote, and the top two vote-getters then enter a runoff.
The right to vote gives every eligible American a voice in our electoral politics. There's too much at stake to stay silent as this right is eroded.
It's clear enough that there was substantial fraud in Ohio, thus delivering the Electoral College vote for President Bush.
Every citizen's vote should count in America, not just the votes of partisan insiders in the Electoral College.
Now that Donald Trump has won the presidency despite losing the popular vote, there's a growing cry to rethink, or even abolish, the electoral college. This would be a mistake.
Presidents are elected not by direct popular vote but by 538 members of the Electoral College.