Author

Matt Vasilogambros

Matt Vasilogambros

Matt Vasilogambros covers voting rights, gun laws and Western climate policy for Stateline. He lives in San Diego, California.

Workers and voters are pictured at a polling place in Las Vegas

More states consider voter ID laws amid conflicting research on their impact

By: - July 4, 2024

Nevada voters may decide in November whether they should join three dozen other states in requiring voters to present valid identification before casting a ballot. And Maine may not be far behind, as the push for voter ID requirements grows nationwide despite conflicting studies over their effects. Conservative organizers in Nevada say they have gathered […]

Roxanne Perret, an organizer with People Power for Florida, registers Mark Wendell to vote at a May festival in Orlando, Fla. Third-party voter registration groups have been threatened with fines and workers with jail time if they violate new state laws.

New voter registration rules threaten hefty fines, criminal penalties for groups

By: - June 10, 2024

ORLANDO, Fla. — On a sticky Sunday afternoon in late May, Mark Wendell ambled through Loch Haven Park, a mossy, oak-covered green space wedged between a trio of lakes and the Orlando Science Center. Among the two dozen food and vendor tents lining the sidewalks at the Orlando Fringe theater and arts festival was People […]

Voter Debbie Sorensen inserts her ballot into a drop box

Deep red Utah wants to keep voting by mail

By: - March 18, 2024

When it comes to voting by mail, Utah is not your typical deep red state. In 2020, when many states scrambled to implement mail-in voting so voters had a safe way to cast a ballot during the pandemic, Utah already had a system. Republican conspiracy theories questioning the integrity of voting by mail in the tumultuous aftermath of the […]

Lake Mead

Feds’ cash stream supports Colorado River conservation — but the money will dry up

By: - September 23, 2023

Editor’s note: Read more Stateline coverage of how communities across the West are grappling with drought that’s worsening because of climate change. Despite a megadrought, states in the West have been able to avoid drastic cuts to their allocations of Colorado River water this year not only because of surprising storms but also thanks to […]

Sign supporting the Greater Idaho movement along the highway south of Fox, Oregon

An Eastern Oregon effort to join Idaho reflects the growing American divide

By: - September 8, 2023

ENTERPRISE, Ore. — This small ranching town, surrounded by towering tree-topped mountains and a valley of rolling grass fields, sits tucked into the northeast corner of the state — both out of the way and right in the middle of a contentious debate. At a meeting late last month, 25 people packed into a stuffy […]

Voters cast their ballots at Boise's Fairmont Junior High

As ranked choice voting gains momentum, parties in power push back

By: - August 23, 2023

Over the past decade, ranked choice voting has become increasingly popular. From conservative Utah to liberal New York City, 13 million American voters in 51 jurisdictions — including all of Alaska and Maine — now use the system, under which voters rank candidates based on preference, leading to an instant runoff in a crowded race. […]

roundabout at West University Boulevard and North 9th Avenue in Tucson, Ariz.,

These cities coordinate to save water, a model for parched Western areas

By: - July 26, 2023

TUCSON, Ariz. — There are no lush green lawns among the rows of single-family homes that line a quiet boulevard a mile west of the University of Arizona campus. Instead, small lizards scurry across gravel to the shade of cacti, shrubs and trees native to the Southwestern desert, as cicadas drone and backyard chickens cluck […]

Lake Powell

Western states agree to Colorado River water-sharing agreement

By: - May 22, 2023

The governors of Arizona, California and Nevada have announced a historic water-sharing agreement for the Colorado River in an attempt to salvage one of the West’s major sources of drinking water that has dwindled in severe drought. The agreement this week marks the culmination of months of tumultuous negotiations among seven Western states, whose 40 […]