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IU experts available to comment on Electoral College vote in 2020 presidential election
December 14, 2020
INDIANAPOLIS and BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Electoral College electors are meeting today to cast their votes in the presidential election. Congress will formally tabulate electoral votes on Jan. 6, but some Republican members of the House have said they plan to challenge President-elect Joe Biden's victory. Can Congress overturn the official election results? What impact will the ongoing legal battles on behalf of President Donald Trump have on the process? Legal and political experts from Indiana University Bloomington and IUPUI are available to comment. For more information, contact Mary Keck at marykeck@iu.edu or 812-856-2148, or Marah Yankey at mqharbis@iu.edu or 812-856-1442.
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Nicholas Almendares
Accountability, democracy, administrative law, class actions, collective responsibility and liability, election law, protests and democracy, class actions, separation of powers, collective responsibility, campaign financing.
IU Bloomington
Phone: 812-856-7834
Email: nalmend@indiana.edu
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Expert Bio
Nicholas Almendares is an associate professor at the Maurer School of Law. His research focuses on accountability and democracy across areas of law such as class actions, separation of powers, collective responsibility and campaign financing. His work takes an interdisciplinary approach, often drawing upon economics, social science and philosophy.
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Marjorie Hershey
Elections, political party organizations, party identification, media coverage of elections, campaign finance.
IU Bloomington
Phone: 812-345-5073
Email: hershey@indiana.edu
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Expert Bio
Marjorie Hershey has written extensively on political parties and campaigns, including the ways in which media interpret election results. She has written four books (one in its 17th edition) and several dozen articles in professional journals. Her most recent work is on party activists and also on media coverage of the Trump campaign and presidency.
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Gerard Magliocca
Torts, constitutional law, intellectual property, legal history, admiralty.
IUPUI
Phone: 317-278-4792
Email: gmaglioc@iupui.edu
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Expert Bio
Gerard N. Magliocca, the Samuel R. Rosen Professor at the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law, is the author of four books and over 20 articles on constitutional law and intellectual property. He received his undergraduate degree from Stanford and his law degree from Yale, and he joined the IU faculty after two years at Covington and Burling and one year as a law clerk for Judge Guido Calabresi on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit. Three of his books have been the subjects of programs on C-Span’s Book TV, including his latest book, on the Bill of Rights. (more)
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Steven Webster
Anger and politics, polarization, voting behavior, public opinion.
IU Bloomington
Phone: 515-343-9407
Email: swwebste@iu.edu
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Expert Bio
Steven Webster, an assistant professor of political science at IU Bloomington, focuses his research on the role of anger in American politics. His book, "American Rage: How Anger Shapes Our Politics," was published in 2020 by Cambridge University Press. He has also written extensively on the growth of "negative partisanship" in the American electorate, as well as the growing amount of polarization between Democrats and Republicans. (more)
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