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Lilly McGee

Digital Communications Manager Lilly McGee
Digital Communications Manager

As the League's digital communications manager, Lilly strengthens the League's relationship with its audience via email, social media, and LWV's website. Since 2021, she has led efforts to enhance the user experience on LWV.org; in January 2022, the site launched its complete visual redesign, and additional (exciting!) enhancements are in progress. Lilly also develops the League's email marketing, blog, and Search Engine Optimization (SEO) strategies, and supports LWV's social media specialist.

Her past work has centered on using communications to empower individuals impacted by trauma, from military veterans to assault survivors. This includes website design, customer relations management (CRM), case management, blogging, video creation and editing, social media marketing, and, in one instance, sampling gourmet candies. Lilly is also a creative writer and has been published in plain china., a national anthology.

Lilly lives in Washington, DC with her cat Tybalt and a rotating cast of rescue animals.

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The League of Women Voters became a household name in the mid-twentieth century as the award-winning sponsor of the US’s first televised presidential debates. Why did that change, and will the League ever sponsor Presidential debates again?

The fight for voting rights is ongoing. One way to fight for a stronger future is to make sure we're up to date on our history.

How well will you do in this quiz about voting rights?

What does it mean when a state goes into a runoff election? We break it down.

We partnered with TikTok influencers across the fashion, food, and activism spheres to promote VOTE411!

You may consider yourself a history buff, but how well do you know the women who shaped our democracy? Test your knowledge and learn a thing or two with this quiz!

On your way to college this? Congratulations! As you step into this new era of your life, make sure you're prepared to take on your new role as a participant in our democracy.

Thanks to resources like VOTE411.org, you know where and how to cast your vote, but how knowledgeable are you on voting history?

Quiz yourself and compare your score with your friends!

On June 23, 2022, five leaders in the political and equal rights movements came together to discuss the current state of democracy and women's role in advancing it. 

Touching on subjects including voter suppression, empowering underserved communities, and attacks on gender and sex-based equality, the panelists had several messages for women working to defend our democracy.

Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) women have always been an integral part of the voting rights movement. From opposing sexist and racist legislation to expanding the freedom to vote, the following five women are just a few of the many icons you should know about.

On March 7, 1965, hundreds of civil rights protestors attempted to march the 50 miles between Selma and Montgomery, Alabama to protest the suppression of Black votes. In this blog, we honor the work of the women who participated in this historic act.