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Lilly McGee

Digital Communications Manager Lilly McGee
Digital Communications Senior Manager

As the League's digital communications senior manager, Lilly strengthens LWV's relationship with its audience via email, social media, and additional web, video, and graphic content. She leads efforts enhancing the user experience on LWV.org, such as January 2022's complete site revamp; this revamp won a W3 Gold award and a Ragan Communications Award. Ongoing work include audits to supercharge the site's accessibility and content optimization.

Lilly also leads the League's email marketing, video production, blog, and Search Engine Optimization (SEO) strategies. Past projects in these fields include the development and promotion of LWV's 2024 Election PSAs and the implementation of the 2023 Women's Inequality Day campaign. She supervises LWV's digital communications coordinator, Stephanie Hernandez.

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 cats Tybalt and Dill Pickles and a rotating cast of rescue animals.

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From Supreme Court decisions to voting rights legislation, 2023 was a busy year for our democracy. But how closely were you paying attention? 

In 2023, Leagues across the US worked diligently to achieve a remarkable number of wins in litigation, voter registration, civic engagement and education, and more. Below are 6 of our greatest accomplishments.

It's up to us to make sure everyone has the information and ability to cast their vote! 

Here are five ways you can empower voters and defend democracy through volunteer work. 

You've cast your vote and possibly received the results  — so what do you do now to defend democracy? Our advocacy, litigation, and voting rights teams have some tips.

Every October, more than a million people vote in one of the most anticipated elections of the year: Fat Bear Week (FBW).

FBW is a brilliant campaign in terms of engaging and educating people worldwide about the majestic brown bear. But in addition to teaching us about bears, it teaches us a lot about how we vote. 

Choose your own Halloween adventure — election edition! Then find our which classic monster most speaks to (or wants to steal) your soul.

Our history is replete with people with disabilities who paved the way for a stronger, more representative democracy — like Judy Heumann, Sojourner Truth, Senator Tammy Duckworth, Claudia Gordan, Harriet Tubman, Joyce Ardell Jackson, and Vilissa Thompson, to name a few. 

Yet we also know that anti-voter laws and regulations disproportionately impact people with disabilities, and the fight to make the vote more accessible is ongoing. 

In this blog, we’ll highlight some of our favorite voting rights activists who were also women with disabilities. Then, we’ll examine how ability and voting rights intersect today. 

How much do you know about our democracy’s Founding Mothers from the eighteenth century to today?

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?