C O M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y | A N N UA L R E P O RT 2 0 2 0
Delivering Democracy
In our entire 117-year history, Seventy’s mission has never been more important than right here, right now. —Michael R. Stiles, Esquire Chair, Committee of Seventy
The Committee of Seventy was established in 1904 for the express purpose of improving the voting process, bringing people of competence and integrity into government, combating corruption, and informing and engaging citizens in the critical affairs of the day. We are the only independent, nonpartisan organization in the region, and the oldest and largest in Pennsylvania that’s pursuing these goals.
Introduction 2 In 2020, our democracy was challenged in unimaginable ways, tested like never before. In the darkness of deep division, partisan political conflict,
Promoting a Culture of Voting 4
and a pandemic health crisis, where Americans were terrifyingly vulnerable to mis- and dis-information, the Committee of Seventy was a bright light, a trusted voice.
DELIVERING DEMOCRACY
Providing Information Devoid of Political Bias 8 Safeguarding Elections 10 Giving People a Voice 12 Protecting “We the People” 14
All Americans can agree that the sanctity and integrity of our election process is the key to the survival of our democracy. If democracy is the lever, voting is the fulcrum. Over the years, the voting machinery, timing, and names on the ballot have changed, but our principles at the Committee of Seventy have remained the same: helping ensure safe, accessible, and fair elections for all. We exist to deliver democracy.
Building Bridges to the Future and Across Divides 16 Seventy Minutes Sponsors 18 Staff/Board/Interns 20 Looking Forward 23
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Introduction We Pennsylvanians don’t realize it, but there aren’t many organizations in this country like the Committee of Seventy, a nonpartisan, good-government organization founded in 1904 and still led by a group of prominent business and civic leaders today. While we knew the 2020 election year would be difficult, we couldn’t have known how consequential it would be and how sharply it would reveal the distinctive value of the Committee of Seventy and the enormous contributions we make to strengthening our local democracy. There’s never been a more anxiety-producing, exhausting election cycle. As our nation has faced significant, unprecedented challenges, we’ve seen the devastating effects of a public health crisis, an unpredictable recession, and a nationwide reckoning with the centuries-old plague of racism. Throughout these trying circumstances, we prepared for an election unlike any we have ever seen. In Pennsylvania, we found ourselves as perhaps the most sought after prize in the presidential election. Thanks to bipartisan legislation passed last fall, our nine million registered voters had important new voting options, including the chance to vote by mail, without the need for an excuse. Spurred by concerns about the pandemic, millions of Pennsylvania voters, 10 times more than ever before, voted by mail for the first time. This prompted all of us to make sure voters got it right so that their votes counted. It also challenged our local officials to run two parallel voting
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operations, one in person and one by mail at the same time.
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In the face of these challenges, we listened to the advice embraced by Teddy Roosevelt: “Do what you can, with what you have, where you are,” and we performed at an extraordinary level: • We helped safeguard election day by dedicating enormous time and energy to support our local election officials, and recruiting and training thousands of poll workers. • We promoted a culture of voting by partnering with more than 100 major employers, non-profits, and community organizations to reach more than a million voters through our WeVote campaign, a statewide outreach and voter education initiative that inspires and prepares citizens to vote.
CO M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y s e v e n t y. o r g
• We provided information devoid of political bias through our digital ballot tool, Studio C70 broadcasts, and weekly newsletter that put critical nonpartisan candidate voting and election information at voter’s fingertips. • We gave citizens a voice through Draw the Lines and Open Primaries PA, issue-driven campaigns that inspire conversation, encourage action and allow the public to partner in the process of democratic reform. • We helped bridge divides. Through our Buchholz Fellows and the PA Project for Civic Engagement, we brought communities and generations together to share ideas and learn from one another. As we look back on 2020, we’re so grateful for those who share in and support our mission, for the many partnerships that extend our reach, for the thousands of volunteers who stepped forward with us to serve their community. Democracy exists in all our collective and individual actions and holds when we hold to it. We couldn’t have accomplished all that we did in 2020 without you. While we are proud of the progress made in the 2020 election cycle, there is much more to do. It’s time for good people of good intent to step forward to further strengthen our democracy. We will capitalize on reinvigorated civic engagement to fight for much needed democratic reforms. In particular, in 2021 we are calling on the General Assembly to draw congressional and legislative maps in a transparent process that listens to our citizens, and we will continue the fight for open primaries in Pennsylvania. We look forward to continuing our work with you.
Onward,
Michael R. Stiles, Esquire
David Thornburgh
CHAIR,
PRESIDENT AND CEO,
Committee of Seventy
Committee of Seventy
“Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.” — Thomas Jefferson, Founding Father and Third President of the United States D E L I V E R I N G D E M O C R AC Y
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Promoting a Culture of Voting
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“Together, through civic engagement, private sector leadership, community support, and bold vision for the future, we can realize all our aspirations.”
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— Jerry Sweeney, President and CEO of Brandywine Realty Trust & We Vote Partner
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We believe that when more people vote and are better informed, democracy wins. That’s why we launched WeVote, a statewide campaign to create excitement and promote a positive, civically engaged culture in organizations and businesses during election cycles.
CO M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y s e v e n t y. o r g
Key Accomplishments
We recruited more than 100 partners (major employers, civic leaders, elected officials, colleges and universities, religious communities, and media outlets) who helped us get out the vote. Together, we reached more than a million voters with trusted, nonpartisan information and helped drive record-setting voter turnout across the state.
WeVote by the Numbers ONLINE VOTER GUIDES:
WEEKLY NEWSLETTERS:
WEVOTE@HOME EVENTS:
255,000+
42,000
1,600
online users
subscribers
viewers each
We need you!
Elections happen every year. Sign your community, business, organization, school, or congregation up to be a WeVote Partner.
D E L I V E R I N G D E M O C R AC Y
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Seventy in the News The eyes of the world were on Pennsylvania, a critical battleground state in the 2020 election, and Seventy’s important work attracted global media attention.
Over the course of many of the most critical months in 2020, Committee of Seventy leadership participated in:
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interviews that resulted in coverage by 35 broadcast (radio and television) outlets
print and online outlets
crossed the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and reached 4.71 million individuals for an estimated 32.5 percent of Pennsylvania’s population.
Nationally, media coverage
reached 39 of the 50 states and more than 37.6 million individuals for an estimated 11.4 percent of the U.S. population.
32.5%
39 50
And internationally,
for a total of
81 local, national, and international media hits.
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Locally, media coverage
media coverage crossed
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countries,
and reached more than
five continents.
CO M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y s e v e n t y. o r g
Highest Performance Local Hits
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Voteswagon” Will Help Pick Up Primary “ Election Ballots at 10 Philadelphia Locations, CBS Philadelphia
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Committee Of Seventy Says Votes Counted On and After Election Day Are Legitimate, CBS Philadelphia
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essons for Pa. elections so we don’t L repeat Wisconsin’s political disgrace, Philadelphia Inquirer lection Experts Say “We Will Not Have E A Full Count On Election Night” In Pennsylvania, CBS Philadelphia essons Learned from the 2020 Primary, L CBS Pittsburgh olitical Watchdog: Pennsylvania Handled P Crush of Mail-In Ballots Well, NBC Philadelphia ow Philadelphia Is Preparing for the H Election, WHYY20
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entral High teacher inspires students C to vote — and to register others, The Philadelphia Inquirer
Reform Congregations Work to Mobilize
Voters With Civic Engagement Campaign, Jewish Exponent our Ways Election Day in Philly Could Go F Terribly Wrong, Philadelphia Magazine
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Pennsylvania primary underway amid pandemic, unrest, FOX Philadelphia
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Surge in mail-in ballots could delay election results, so Wolf wants to change the rules, Spotlight PA
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Flashpoint: Battle over voting procedures in Pennsylvania, plus PhillyVoting.org engaging Black & LGBTQ voters, KYW Newsradio
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“ Voteswagon” drives awareness for 2020 election in Philly, 6abc
Highest Performance National Hits
Despite White House
Amid unrest, curfews, and a
As false info hits “boiling
Statement, Trump Casts
global pandemic, Pennsylvania
point,” ads warn US voters
Doubt On Election Again
prepares to vote
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Providing Information Devoid of Political Bias
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“People who don’t think they have enough information to cast an informed vote, think it’s better to stay home. So we try to get as much information as humanly possible in front of people, so they know they’re casting an informed ballot.” — Lauren Cristella, Chief Advancement Officer Committee of Seventy
We believe everyone has a responsibility and an opportunity to strengthen our local democracy. We knew what a challenge this election cycle would be and did everything in our collective
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power to make sure Pennsylvanians were both
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informed and ready to make their vote count.
Stay informed!
Sign up for our newsletter.
CO M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y s e v e n t y. o r g
Key Accomplishments
We provided on-demand information
“The 2020
sessions to more than 17,000 voters that
election in
covered tools for learning about all the candidates, voting by mail and navigating
Pennsylvania
new voting machines.
wouldn’t have been a success without the hard work of the
We gave voters a window into government through our Studio C70
Committee of Seventy.”
broadcasts. More than 56,000 viewers tuned into featured interviews with
— Philadelphia City Commissioner Al Schmidt
candidates and with city, state, and national leaders on the issues of the day. “Your [Committee of Seventy] presentation was
We prepared voters to vote safely,
terrific; everything I hoped for and more, much
smartly, and fast through our BYOBallot
more. You were incredibly informative and helpful,
platform, which allowed voters to put in
easy to understand and very calming. You also did
their addresses, make a plan to vote, dive
a fantastic job answering people’s questions and providing the entire audience with straightforward,
into the details of every candidate, save
practical voting guidance. I have so much respect
their picks and share with others.
for the expertise, integrity, civic mindedness, and ingenuity of the Committee of Seventy. — An Election Briefing Participant
ON-DEMAND ELECTION BRIEFINGS:
STUDIO C70 BROADCASTS:
BYOBallot USERS:
75+
97
27,400
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Safeguarding Elections
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2020 election programming was made possible through generous support from Bernard & Audre
“This is not just flipping on the lights and turning on the voting machines.” — Pat Christmas, Policy Director Committee of Seventy
Rapoport Foundation, The Center for Election Innovation & Research, The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, National Vote at Home Institute, and Rapoport Family Foundation.
Make a gift and help us
continue our critical work.
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In a year in which election officials needed help to serve more voters than ever before, we
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stepped in as partners to prepare poll workers, the front line workers of democracy. We knew just how important our preparations would be to ensure all of us could stand tall when the dust settled from this election. In the end, election officials and poll workers across the Commonwealth heroically executed a presidential election amid new election law and voting systems, relentless litigation, uncertain funding, and a global pandemic.
CO M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y s e v e n t y. o r g
Key Accomplishments
We dedicated enormous time and energy to support our local election officials to make sure they have what it takes to run a free, fair, accurate, transparent election in this challenging time, including connecting our local officials to best practices and best practitioners from around the
5,500+
training resources distributed to poll workers in Philadelphia
2,000
poll workers recruited using the C70 sign up link
country, particularly in the area of voting by mail.
4,775
We mobilized to address a critical shortage of
people attended 32 info sessions on three topics, plus last-minute Q&A sessions
poll workers. Along with our partners at Power the Polls and The Voter Project, we recruited more than 20,000 poll workers to serve communities on election day. As a result, election boards in Philadelphia and across the Commonwealth were fully staffed for the first time ever. We developed resources to effectively and
“From recruitment to training to fighting for COVID safety materials to facilitating cross-city communication to always having the ear of the city commissioners to find out just what in the hell was going on in the face of often-maddening silence and confusion, they [C70] fought for us. Their efforts made
efficiently train poll workers. We partnered
a huge difference in how our city’s election
with Stanford-MIT’s Healthy Elections team
went yesterday, and that’s gonna go largely
and veteran poll workers to create easy-to-use, helpful guides and checklists for poll workers by
unsung, but I’m singing it.” —A Philadelphia poll worker
poll workers to ensure a smooth Election Day for Philadelphia and Pennsylvania. “THANK YOU for the amazing work you
We facilitated the expansion of the City Commissioner’s “Rover” program from 50 to
did and the materials you put together to train poll workers. I leaned heavily on the additional materials you put together, and
more than 700 people. These were paid positions
had a fantastic time participating in your
at every polling place in the City to support
sessions. The thirty (!) new poll workers I
COVID-19 safety, troubleshoot issues for poll workers, and de-escalate any issues.
D E L I V E R I N G D E M O C R AC Y
recruited and trained for my precincts in Chester County were very grateful as well.” —A judge of elections in Chester County
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Giving People a Voice D E L I V A healthy democracy depends on people
“This is not about turning red into blue or vice versa. It’s about who’s in the room and who’s outside the room.” — Chris Satullo, Civic Engagement Consultant, Committee of Seventy
having the desire, knowledge and opportunity to participate. That’s why we launched two important campaigns to give citizens a voice on important issues like open and free elections and the drawing of congressional, legislative, and city council maps. Draw the Lines PA and Open Primaries PA bring the public and government leaders together to make sure the voices of the many are well-represented.
“Gerrymandering creates
“I’m a registered independent and unable to
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participate in PA primary elections. I pay taxes
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a system in which elected officials choose their voters, not the other way around.”
that are used to run elections in the state. I should be able to participate like anyone else. There is no reason PA’s primaries shouldn’t be open to every registered voter. If you are serious about winning the hearts and minds of independent voices in the middle, you should start by making all elections
— Ryan Cedzo, Citizen Map Corps member
accessible to them. It’s like an ideological wall.” — Joe P., Haverford Township, PA CO M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y s e v e n t y. o r g
Key Accomplishments
We pushed back on partisan gerrymandering
We led the charge to open up primary
through Draw the Lines PA, the largest
elections to more than 1.2 million unaffiliated
outpouring of hands-on citizen mapping in the
Pennsylvanians who could vote for candidates
history of our county. We engaged more than
in the June 2, 2020, primary. Through Open
6,000 citizens to pick up the digital pen to draw
Primaries PA we continue this long term
their own maps and inform the upcoming formal
effort for primary reform.
process for drawing congressional, legislative and city council maps in the spring of 2021.
Events and Class Visits: 283 in 38 counties of PA People reached: 10,300+ Maps Registered: 6,100+ | Worked on: 9,400+
Thank you to our coalition partners Common Cause PA, Commonwealth Commonsense, Independent Pennsylvanians, League of Women Voters of PA, Philly Set Go, Business for America Join the campaign for open
primaries in PA www.openprimariespa.org
Competition entries: 1,200 Prize Money: $121k Draw the Lines programming is made possible through generous support from the Benedum Foundation, Grable Foundation, Heinz Endowments, Hillman Family Foundations, Independence Foundation, Pottstown Area Health & Wellness Foundation, and William Penn Foundation. Visit Draw the Lines PA and find
out how to slay the gerrymander.
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Protecting “We the People”
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“Over the years, the voting machinery, timing, and names on the ballot have changed, but our principles have remained the same: helping ensure safe, accessible, and fair elections for all.” — David Thornburgh, President and CEO, Committee of Seventy
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The “Voteswagon” Tour
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In the leadup to the November 2020 election, Seventy went on the road to drive the message that every vote counts and promote mail-in ballot drop-off locations.
CO M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y s e v e n t y. o r g
Timeline 1904: C70 is founded by a group of reform-minded business
The Committee of Seventy is the oldest
and civic leaders committed to turning around Philadelphia, then commonly recognized as the worstgoverned city in the United States.
and largest nonpartisan, nonprofit political reform organization in the Commonwealth. The longevity of Seventy is unparalleled, but our sustained success is what stands out.
1905: C70 begins monitoring elections and successfully seeks
convictions of ballot-box stuffers. 1925-1927: C70 secures the convictions of approximately 40
registrars and election officers on Election Code violations. 1928: C70 fights for mechanical voting machines to be
installed in every Philadelphia voting division as an extension of its concern for honest elections. 1940: C70, produces “Your Right to Vote,” a series of radio
Pushing for fair elections, keeping voters informed, advocating for common sense reform.
broadcasts. 1996: C70 begins delivering “News You Can Use” reports via
email. 2006: C70 advocates for reforms in the aftermath of the
2003 pay-to- play scandals that eventually result in new contracting protections, campaign contribution limits, lobbying disclosure rules, and an independent Board of Ethics in Philadelphia. 2012: C70 exposes the disenfranchisement of Philly voters in
the 2012 presidential election, forcing the city to begin to reform its shoddy handling of elections. 2020: C70 reaches more than 1 million Pennsylvanians with
trusted nonpartisan information and partners with state and local election officials to safeguard election day during the COVID-19 pandemic, including a massive vote-by-mail initiative and poll worker recruitment and training.
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Building Bridges to the Future and Across Divides
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Effective, ethical leadership and a willingness to come together across differences are essential to a functional and vibrant democracy. We provide the skills and space to actively engage individuals and communities taking
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action to shape our shared future.
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We are building the next generation of civic leaders. Each year, through the Buchholz Fellowship, we select six to eight promising young civic leaders in a competitive process to serve a year-long term on the C70 board, paired with mentors and develop and deliver innovative civic programming. We help communities and organizations hold productive conversations about challenging issues. In 2018, C70 acquired the PA Project for Civic Engagement (PPCE), and in 2020, we launched the Red and Blue Exchange (RBX), a forum for free and open inquiry on matters of public importance, promotion of the robust exchange of divergent views, and the informed, reasoned, and respectful expression of ideas regardless of their ideology or popularity. We host big conversations connecting our local democracy to the national. Faced with the pandemic, this year, we pivoted to a virtual annual event and produced a high-quality program that drew the biggest audience ever. Seventy Minutes (Election 2020), a news magazine style event attracted more than 6,000 viewers and featured an all-star lineup of national commentators, pollsters, and pundits who gave us their take on the what, so what, and now what of this year’s momentous presidential election. CO M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y s e v e n t y. o r g
Seventy Minutes: (Election 2020 Edition)
Michael Smerconish
Michael Beschloss
CNN Show Host Host of the Michael Smerconish Program
American historian
Nikole HannahJones
Author
Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for The New York Times Magazine Creator of the landmark 1619 Project
Chuck Rosenberg
Nate Gonzales
MSNBC Contributor Former acting Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration
Editor & Publisher of Inside Election CNN Political Analyst
Asma Khalid
David Frum
Amber McReynolds
Emily Bazelon
Charlie Dent
Political reporter NPR Podcaster
Staff writer at The Atlantic Political commentator Former speechwriter for
CEO for the National Vote At Home Institute and Coalition Co-author of When Women Vote
Staff writer at The New York Times Magazine Co-host of Slate’s
CNN political commentator Congressman representing Pennsylvania’s 15th congressional district, 2005 to 2018
Pres. George W. Bush
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Political Gabfest
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is no small accomplishment these days! Thanks for all the hard work that went into reimagining this.... And David, nice handling of the Phanatic!”
In case you missed it, watch
“Perfect summary of today’s political scene and
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our democracy—but left D E Lreason I V E R I Nfor G Dconcern E M O C R for AC Y optimistic!”
Seventy Minutes online here:
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Seventy Minutes Sponsors Thank you to our sponsors for sticking with us and supporting our vital work.
PRESENTING SPONSOR
VISIONARY
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Independence Blue Cross
TD Bank
Morgan Lewis & Bockius
Philadelphia Phillies
CHAMPION Leslie Anne Miller
CO M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y s e v e n t y. o r g
ADVOCATE AmeriHealth Caritas
Glenmede
Sabre Systems
AmerisourceBergen
Greenberg Traurig
Cozen O'Connor Day & Zimmermann
The Lau Longsworth Charitable Fund
Saltz Mongeluzzi and Bendesky
Essent
M&T Bank
Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis
Fulton Bank
NELSON
Stradley Ronon
Troutman Pepper
Thomas Jefferson University
Barbara Adams
Ernst & Young
PwC
Alternative Investment Exchange (AIX)
EwingCole FMC
Saul Ewing Arnstein & Lehr LLP
Bimbo Bakeries USA
Holman Enterpises
Spring Garden Lending
Blank Rome
Kleinbard
Tactix Real Estate Advisors
BLBB Charitable
William and Linda Madway
Temple University
Lin and Jim Buck
Northern Trust
Tucker Law Group
Citizens Bank
PECO
University of Pennsylvania
Diversified Search
Post & Schell
Laura and Richard Vague
DLA Piper
Public Financial Management
White and Williams
Arcweb Technologies
Dawn Holden Woods
Fox Rothschild
Aletheia Henry
Horizon House, Inc.
Leslie Smallwood-Lewis
Brookman, Rosenberg, Brown & Sandler
David Seltzer
CITIZEN
DLS International
CONTRIBUTOR
D E L I V E R I N G D E M O C R AC Y
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Thank You There were so many who worked tirelessly to support our mission and our work during this important election year. We thank everyone who stood with us, including 150 who joined our new membership program. We could not have accomplished this without you.
Staff David Thornburgh PRESIDENT AND CEO
Lauren Cristella CHIEF ADVANCEMENT OFFICER
Dan Bright DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS
Patrick Christmas POLICY DIRECTOR
Paul Droesch SENIOR RESEARCH FELLOW
Chris Satullo CIVIC ENGAGEMENT CONSULTANT
Ashley Session
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DIRECTOR OF CIVIC ENGAGEMENT & PARTNERSHIPS
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Justin Villere DRAW THE LINES MANAGING DIRECTOR
CO M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y s e v e n t y. o r g
Board Michael R. Stiles
Ira Brown
Howard J. Davis, Esquire
Area Executive, Metro Region, M&T Bank
Kleinbard LLC
VICE CHAIR
Glenn D. Bryan
Partner, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP
Assistant Vice President, Community Relations, University of Pennsylvania
Partner, Stradley Ronon Stevens and Young
Marilyn Z. Kutler, Esquire
David Buck
CHAIR
Eric Kraeutler, Esquire
VICE CHAIR
Partner, Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis LLP
Thomas A. Decker, Esquire SECRETARY
Vice Chairman, Cozen O’Connor
Laura LaRosa TREASURER
Executive Director of Client Development & Managing Director, Glenmede
Barbara Adams, Esquire Bruce D. Armon, Esquire Philadelphia Office Managing Partner, Saul Ewing Arnstein & Lehr LLP
Larry Bendesky Managing Shareholder, Saltz Mongeluzzi and Bendesky
Glenn D. Blumenfeld Principal, Tactix Real Estate Advisors, LLC
Erin Murphy Boyle Business Development Executive, Ernst & Young LLP
D E L I V E R I N G D E M O C R AC Y
Executive Vice President, Philadelphia Phillies
Michael C. Carbone Regional President Metro PA/NJ Market, TD Bank
Steven Davis, Esquire
Lisa Detwiler Senior Vice President & General Counsel, FS Investment Solutions, LLC
Edward M. Dunham, Jr., Esquire * Spector Gadon Rosen Vinci P.C.
Cristina Cavalieri, Esquire
Patrick J. Eiding
Senior Vice President & Chief Legal Officer, Thomas Jefferson University
Council President, Philadelphia AFL-CIO
Chris Cera
Tim Ford **
Founder & CEO, Arcweb Technologies
Associate, Dilworth Paxon, LLP
John Chou
Vice President and General Counsel, PECO
Executive Vice President and General Counsel, AmerisourceBergen Corporation
Anthony E. Gay
Michael Gebhardt, Esquire
Katherine Clupper
Vice President & University Counsel, Temple University
Managing Director, Public Financial Advisors LLC
Jay Goldstein, Esquire
Eileen M. Coggins, Esquire
Chairman & CEO, Spring Garden Lending
General Counsel and SVP, Medicare & LTSS, AmeriHealth Caritas
George S. Hasenecz
Keshema Davidson **
Senior Vice President - Investments, Brandywine Realty Trust
Manager of Community Affairs, Cristo Rey Philadelphia High School
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Dr. Kisha Hortman Hawthorne
Stephen W. Miller, Esquire *
Jamison (Jamie) Tranfalia
Senior Vice President & Chief Information Officer, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
Senior Counsel, Ricci Tyrrell Johnson & Grey
Senior Vice President, Citizens Bank
Abbey Hazlett, Esquire
Greg Montanaro
CEO, AIX
Vice President & Executive Director, Office of the President, Drexel University
Maulin S. Vidwans, Esquire
John “Ozzie” Nelson, Jr.
Sandy Vogel **
Partner, Troutman Pepper
Aletheia Henry Michelle J. Hong Senior Vice President, Northern Trust Corporation
Anne Marie F. Hughes Senior Vice President, Wells Fargo Bank
Thomas A. Hutton, Esquire SVP, General Counsel & Corporate Secretary, Independence Blue Cross
Philip P. Jaurigue
Linda Washington-Brown
Vice President, External and Government Affairs, Comcast Corporation
Vice President, Developmental Services, Horizon House
Nancy R. Peterson, Esquire
President & CEO, AccessMatters
Vice President & Deputy General Counsel, Allied Universal Security
Dawn Holden Woods
Susan S. Pié, Esquire Partner-In-Charge, Philadelphia Region, EisnerAmper LLP
Jillian Kirn, Esquire Shareholder, Greenberg Traurig
Jannie K. Lau Adam E. Laver, Esquire Partner, Blank Rome LLP
Tom Levy ** Coordinator, Member Engagement, The Chamber of Commerce of Greater Philadelphia
Peggy Leimkuhler EVP & COO, Firstrust Bank
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Bret S. Perkins
John Joseph, Esquire
Program Manager, University City District
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Assistant Director, Penn PORES
Lori Reiner
Mariya Khandros **
Sue Lonergan Regional President, Southeastern Pennsylvania Division, Fulton Bank
Jonathan B. MacKenzie Managing Director, Risk Assurance, PwC
Jennifer Mantini
Adam Robinson ** Corporate Partnerships Officer, Museum of the American Revolution
Melissa Weiler Gerber
CEO, Turning Points for Children
Thomas Young ** Associate, Bellevue Strategies
* Board Emeritus (Non-voting Member) ** Buchholz Fellows (Non-voting Member)
Dan Ross Vice President, Human Resources, Day & Zimmermann
Courtney Gilligan Saleski, Esquire Partner, DLA Piper
Dianne L. Semingson President, DLS International
Anthony D. Shore VP, Deputy General Counsel & Chief Compliance Officer, Essent Guaranty, Inc.
Leslie Smallwood-Lewis Member, Mosaic Development Partners
Interns Kathleen Curlee Katie Kelly Samuel Kim Cara Mahoney Kiley Marron Julia Mitchell Megan Shaeffer Mark Steiner Madelyn Strohm Zoey Weisman
Eric Stahl ** Associate, Crowell & Moring, LLP
Nicole G. Tell Executive Director, BLBB Charitable
Deals Partner, PwC
David B. Thornburgh
Leslie Anne Miller, Esquire
President & CEO, Committee of Seventy
Principal, Leslie Anne Miller, LLC
Partner, White and Williams
Chairman & CEO, NELSON
President, Sabre Systems, Inc.
Principal, Post & Schell
Joe Ujobai
CO M M I T T E E O F S E V E N T Y s e v e n t y. o r g
Looking Forward The Electoral College has voted, we’ve inaugurated a new president, and the 2020 presidential election season has officially ended. But, as the events of January 6 revealed to our shock and horror, the work of delivering democracy continues and is more urgently needed than ever. An effective and equitable democracy requires constant vigilance from informed and engaged citizens. We invite you to join us as we continue to work to improve the voting process, encourage honest and capable people to seek public office and help them make government work better, and engage citizens in the process of making important decisions about our future.
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