Wendy Weiser
wendy.weiser@nyu.edu
Wendy Weiser directs the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law, a non-partisan think tank and public interest law center. She founded and directed the center’s Voting Rights and Elections Project, coordinating litigation, research, and advocacy efforts to enhance political participation and prevent voter disenfranchisement across the country. Her work and the work she directed protected the voting rights of hundreds of thousands of citizens in 2006, 2008, and 2010.
She has authored a number of nationally-recognized publications and articles on voting rights and election reform; litigated ground-breaking voting rights lawsuits; testified before both houses of Congress and in a variety of state legislatures; and provided policy and legislative drafting assistance to federal and state legislators and administrators across the country. She is a frequent public speaker and media contributor on democracy issues.
She has appeared on CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, Democracy Now!, and NPR’s Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Diane Rehm Show, among other outlets; her political commentary has been published in the New York Times, Roll Call, the Hill, Foreign Affairs, Huffington Post, and elsewhere; and she is frequently quoted by the New York Times, the Washington Post, the National Journal, Politico, and other news outlets across the country. Previously, she directed the center’s Fair Courts Project, which seeks to preserve a fair and impartial judiciary. She also served as an Adjunct Professor at NYU School of Law, where she taught the Brennan Center Public Policy Advocacy Clinic.
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Contributions
The mean-spirited, massive drive to cut down the vote, state by state
COMMENTARY | May 137, 2012
For reporters and editors, is there a more important story for democracy in America than the laws making it harder, sometimes almost impossible, for millions of people to vote? Wendy Weiser of the Brennan Center spells them out: 22 new laws and two executive actions in 17 states, and at least 74 more restrictive bills pending in 24 states.
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