How A 1990s Illinois Race Changed The Way We Count Votes Today episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 20, 2024 · 20 MIN

How A 1990s Illinois Race Changed The Way We Count Votes Today

from In the Loop with Sasha-Ann Simons

Long before there was Bush v. Gore and the “dimpled chad” fiasco in Florida, there were Penny Pullen and Rosemary Mulligan, two suburban Chicago Republicans vying for the same state house seat in a race so close, it was decided at points by a handful of votes, a coin toss and eventually the Illinois Supreme Court. Reset talk with author Patrick Wohl about his new book “Down Ballot: How A Local Campaign Became A National Referendum On Abortion” for more on the significance of that race and why every vote counts. For a full archive of Reset interviews, head over to wbez.org/reset.

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How A 1990s Illinois Race Changed The Way We Count Votes Today

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This episode was published on March 20, 2024.

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Long before there was Bush v. Gore and the “dimpled chad” fiasco in Florida, there were Penny Pullen and Rosemary Mulligan, two suburban Chicago Republicans vying for the same state house seat in a race so close, it was decided at points by a...

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