Arizona State Conference NAACP

Arizona State Conference NAACP The Arizona State Conference NAACP is an advocacy and civil rights organization.

Look at this!!
05/10/2026

Look at this!!

One Vote! (YOURS)*In 1800 – Thomas Jefferson was elected President by one vote in the House of Representatives after a t...
05/04/2026

One Vote! (YOURS)

*In 1800 – Thomas Jefferson was elected President by one vote in the House of Representatives after a tie in the Electoral College.

*In 1824 – Andrew Jackson won the presidential popular vote but lost by one vote in the House of Representatives to John Quincy Adams after an Electoral College dead-lock.

*In 1845 – The U.S. Senate passed the convention annexing Texas by two votes (27/25).

*In 1846 – President Polk’s request for a Declaration of War against Mexico passed by one vote.

*In 1867 – The Alaska purchase was ratified in the Senate by two votes: 37-2, paving the way for future statehood.

*In 1868 – President Andrew Johnson was Impeached but not convicted because the Senate was one vote shy of the necessary two thirds required.

*In 1876 – Samuel Tilden won the presidential popular vote but came up one electoral vote shy and lost to Rutherford B. Hayes.

*In 1916, Woodrow Wilson was elected President by carrying one state by less than one vote per precinct.

*In 1920, women won the right to vote by passage of the 19th amendment to the Constitution. Tennessee, the last state needed to pass the amendment, ratified the amendment by one vote.

*In 1923, one vote gave Adolph Hi**er leadership of the N**i Party.

*In 1941 – Congress amended the active-service component of the Selective Service Act from one year to two-and-a-half years by one vote, 203 to 202.

*In 1948 – A Texas Convention voted for Lyndon B. Johnson over ex-Governor Coke Steven in a contested Senatorial election.

*In 1960, John F. Kennedy's margin of victory over Richard Nixon was less than one vote per precinct.

*In 1962 – Governors of Maine, Rhode Island and North Dakota were elected by an average of one vote per precinct.

*In 1968, Hubert Humphrey lost and Richard Nixon won the presidential election by a margin of fewer than three votes per precinct

*In 1977 – Vermont State representative Sydney Nixon was seated as an apparent one vote winner, 570 to 569. Mr. Nixon resigned when the State House determined, after a recount, that he had actually lost to his opponent Robert Emond 572 to 571.

*In 1989 – A Lansing, Michigan School District millage proposition failed when the final recount produced a tie vote 5,147 for, and 5,147 against. On the original vote count, votes against the proposition were ten more than those in favor. The result meant that the school district had to reduce its budget by $2.5 million.

*In 1994 – 1.1 votes per precinct in Alaska elected Tony Knowles as Governor and Fran Ulmer as Lieutenant Governor out of 216,668 votes cast in the General Election.

*In 1994 – Republican Randall Luthi and Independent Larry Call tied for a seat in the Wyoming House of Representatives from the Jackson Hole area with 1,941 votes each. A recount produced the same result. Mr. Luthi was finally declared the winner when, in a drawing before the State Canvassing Board, a ping pong ball bearing his name was pulled from the cowboy hat of Democratic Governor Mike Sullivan.

*In 1997 – Dakota Democrat John McIntyre led Republican Hal Wick 4,195 to 4,191 for the second seat in Legislative District 12 on election night. A subsequent recount showed Wick the winner at 4,192 to 4,191. The State Supreme Court however, ruled that one ballot counted for Wick was invalid due to an over-vote. This left the race a tie. After hearing arguments from both sides, the State Legislature voted to seat Wick 46 to 20.

*In 2000 – The Presidential election was decided by an extremely narrow margin. George W. Bush won the state of Florida by just 537 votes, making him the next President of the United States. Close to 6 million voters went to the polls in Florida. It might not have been by one vote, but certainly every vote counted.

*In 2006 – Connecticut’s 2nd U.S. Congressional seat was won by Joe Courtney with 121,252 votes to Rob Simmons’ 121,158; a difference of only 94 votes.

*In 2008 – Stockton, California: The Stockton Unified School Trustee Area No. 3 seat was won by one vote. Jose Morales received 2,302 votes while Anthony Silva received 2,301.

*In 2008 – Minnesota voters cast 2.9 million votes in their US Senate race that may be decided by as few as 200 votes (1/1000th of one %)

*In 2010 – In Nevada, the NYE County Primary contest for County Commissioner District IV was a dead heat with both Butch Borasky and Carl Moore receiving 381 votes. In the Lincoln County Primary, the District Attorney race was decided by only 3 votes.

https://azmvdnow.gov/guest/customeranonymous/voterregistration

Just to be clear….
04/15/2026

Just to be clear….

04/07/2026
04/07/2026
Thankful for the Governors veto of Senate Bill  1439 that is meant to highlight an individual, versus highlighting a mea...
03/07/2026

Thankful for the Governors veto of Senate Bill 1439 that is meant to highlight an individual, versus highlighting a meaningful cause or non political entity.

03/04/2026

03/03/2026

📣
The NAACP is definitely not an organization where a "vibe check" is enough to oust leadership. It is designed with a specific hierarchy to ensure stability and prevent local chapters from dissolving into internal squabbles without oversight.

Here is a quick breakdown of how that power structure actually functions:

The Chain of Command

* National Dominance: Because every local branch is a subordinate unit of the National Association, the national office holds the ultimate "firing" power.

* Article X (Removal of Officers): This is the formal disciplinary process. It’s a high bar. A petition for removal must be filed, followed by a hearing, and ultimately, the National Board of Directors must provide the final stamp of approval.

* The "Next Election" Reality: For most members, the election cycle is the only practical path. NAACP branch elections typically happen every two years (in even-numbered years).

Why is it so rigid?

📣
The NAACP uses this centralized structure to protect its brand and legal standing. If a branch president could be removed by a simple "no confidence" vote at a local meeting, it could lead to:

* Hostile Takeovers: Factions within a city could easily flip leadership back and forth.

* Due Process: Article X ensures a president can't be removed for personal vendettas without a formal investigation into "conduct inimical to the best interests of the Association."

📣
Note: While the National Board has the final say, the National Office (specifically the Membership and Units Committee) often acts as the gatekeeper and filters these complaints before they even reach the Board.

02/19/2026

Address

Phoenix, AZ
85036

Website

https://linktr.ee/aznaacp

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Arizona State Conference NAACP posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Arizona State Conference NAACP:

Share