Posts tagged voting
FLIP THE VOTE!

I attended a wonderful zoom gathering last night for an organization I’d never heard of: Flip the Vote. It began with representatives asking us what was the most expensive election of 2022. It turned out to be Marjorie Taylor Greene’s congressional battle in Georgia with a Democrat, Shawn Harris. As you probably know, Greene won. We were then told that just contributing lots of money to such elections isn’t a winning strategy.

We were then told what is: supporting grassroots groups working with people who are inclined to be Democrats, but usually don’t vote. These people are often poor, female, and people of color. The carefully selected grassroots groups do what is called “relational organizing.” They enlist potential voters similar to themselves and help and inspire them to vote. They’re working in eight swing states: Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. They’ve been successful in encouraging 60% of the people they encounter to vote Democratic.

This strategy is the most successful way to help both Kamala Harris win the presidency and “down ballot” candidates make both the House and the Senate Democratic. I’ve entirely changed my giving strategy. Instead of sending money to Harris or the senators in need (and as a result getting endless appeals for more), I’m now donating to Flip the Vote. You can access them at www.flipthevote.org/partner-groups. Please follow me soon in this endeavor!

Encourage Young People To Vote!

 

     The Republican Party recently declared that they plan to oppose any measure to curtail climate change.  Climate change affects all of us, but especially young people, who will have to spend their lives dealing with its consequences.  In addition, Republicans have continued their attacks on gay, trans, and non-binary people.  This is another issue where young people completely disagree with this “strategy.”  For recent generations, sexual orientation is a non-issue, a simple fact of someone’s identity, which they have no problem with.  Finally, young people, as well as most Americans, are in favor of legal abortion.  And young people, who of course can get pregnant, are particularly affected by its criminalization.  Republican opposition to abortion has largely succeeded by suppressing voting rights, gerrymandering, and making it more difficult to change state constitutions, as is currently going on in Ohio. 

     When you read the Supreme Court majority opinions in the Dobbs case, which overturned Roe v. Wade, they are truly shocking.  Samuel Alito cited Matthew Hale as an authority.  Hale was a 17th-century jurist who believed that women should be burned as witches and executed if they attempted to end a pregnancy (which wasn’t even a crime then).  The other majority judges cited every single anti-abortion statute even established.  They failed to mention that the vast majority of these were passed in the late 19th century, when the nascent American Medical Association was attempting to oust midwives from the birthing process.  Not one of them mentioned the negative side of outlawing abortion: most hospitals housed “septic abortion wards” and nearly 1000 women died from illegal abortions each year.  Outlawing abortion only ends safe abortions.

     Given young people’s opposition to Republican positions on climate change, sexual orientation, and abortion, I think progressives should put their energy and money into encouraging young people to vote.  I’ve long supported voting rights organizations (another Republican strategy, and a sign that they’re on the losing side, is to curtail voting rights) and I’ve written them all this weekend.  They include MoveOn, Indivisible, and the Voter Action Project.

     I’ve written before about how I think Republicans are pursuing a losing strategy.  But to make sure they lose, let’s work to get out the vote among young people!                                

ROE, ROE, ROE THE VOTE!

I was thinking about writing a blog this month and realized that I was too busy working for the election.  So I’m writing about that.  It’s less than five weeks to the mid-term elections on November 8th.  These elections are crucially important.  If the Democrats win, laws affecting all of our lives can be passed.  If not, we return to Trump and his Republicans’ failed policies.

     Some of the most important laws are, first, reversing the Supreme Court’s decision overturning Roe v. Wade.  The Republican fiction that this “just gave power to the states” has been negated by two events.  First, a number of states have denied abortion in all cases, including rape, incest, and saving the life of the mother.  Other states prevent doctors from intervening unless the mother is near death, even if the fetus has died.  Second, Lindsey Graham and the Republicans have proclaimed that they will pass a nation-wide abortion ban.  Regardless of your personal feelings about abortion, do you believe you really have the right to determine this policy for all Americans?  The Supreme Court does.  Judge Alito’s opinion included the theories of Sir Matthew Hale, considered a misogynist even in his own time, the 17th century.  In addition to outlawing abortion, Hale argued that women could be burnt as witches and that husbands could rape their wives.  Judge Clarence Thomas went even further.  He argued that the court should rule against same-sex marriage and outlaw contraception.  (I’m not making this up.)  He did not rule against inter-racial marriage, however, since he is a black man married to a white woman.  What hypocrisy!

     It is not only abortion that is on the ballot this year.  A number of Republicans, and even their amazingly vague platform, have argued that states have the right to overturn federal elections (one of Trump’s main tactics in 2020) and against renewing both Social Security and Medicare.

     So what have I been doing to counter this – and what can we all do?  First, I have been donating money to Democratic candidates.  First, for the Senate, second for the House, and third, for Governors.  I think we have a good chance to take the Senate, in part because of the caliber of many Republican candidates, like Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania.  We have a more difficult time taking the House, largely because of Republican gerrymandering, but it is still possible.  We won the House in 2020 and the same gerrymandering was in effect.  Finally, there are some tight and important governor’s races: in Florida, Texas, and Georgia.  Christ vs. Desantis in Florida, O’Rourke vs. Abbot in Texas, and Abrams vs. Kemp in Georgia.

     So what can we do?  First and most important, DONATE MONEY!  Now is the time!  Second, write postcards to people in swing states, urging them to vote.  Both Indivisible and MoveOn will send them to you.  Personally, I’m writing to folks in Pennsylvania.  It’s not too late to do this and it makes a big difference.

         Finally, we can canvas, especially if we live in swing states.  I did this in previous elections, but can’t right now.  But you all can – or convince those you know in those states to do so.  This election is vitally important to all of us.

Make Sure You Vote!

                                   

          A short while ago, a white woman in her thirties told me, “It it’s Biden, I’m not going to vote.”  I tried arguing with her, saying that Trump was much worse than Biden, but I got nowhere.  She maintained that both of them supported corporate capitalism and that if Biden were president, nothing would change.  I was very upset with her, but then I remembered that I had done exactly the same thing she was advocating.

         Back in 1968, I could not bring myself to vote for the Democratic candidate, Hubert Humphrey, to be president.  Humphrey, Lyndon Johnson’s vice-president, had supported the Vietnam war, which I’d marched against for years.  Nor did he repudiate the dreadful police riots in Chicago against peaceful demonstrators at the Democratic Convention.  So I voted for Eldridge Cleaver, the Black Panther who ran on the Peace and Freedom ticket.  Cleaver had no chance of winning, but this action made me feel righteous.  However by doing it, I helped make Richard Nixon president – an outcome I deplored. 

         I felt guilty about this action of mine for years.  I never believed that Humphrey was nearly as bad as Nixon.  Nixon’s presidency was a national disaster, culminating in Watergate.  Nor do I believe that Nixon was nearly as bad as Donald Trump is, although there are interesting parallels between them.  In both Watergate and Trump’s attempt to get the president of Ukraine to give him dirt on Biden, the cover-ups are almost worse than the actions. 

Just as Humphrey was superior to Nixon, so Biden is far better than Trump.  Equating the two, for whatever reasons, is a false and dangerous identification.  It could make Trump president for a second term, further eroding democracy in the United States.

         Some people believe that evil-doers should be allowed to obtain power, because then voters will see how dreadful they are and revolt against them.  This tactic was tried in Weimar Germany in the early 1930s.  Some members of the powerful German Socialist Party advocated this strategy against the Nazis, calling it “Socialist Defeatism.”  I think we all know how that turned out.

         In conclusion, it’s vitally important to vote – even if the candidate isn’t your favorite, even if you object to some of their views or positions, even if you don’t like him or her.  The alternative is so much worse.

Masculine Privilege

Masculine Privilege

         When the U.S. Senate rammed through the confirmation of Judge Brett Kavanaugh last weekend, it perpetuated anti-female biases as old as Western civilization.  “The male is by nature superior, and the female inferior,” wrote the Greek philosopher Aristotle, whose teachings supported laws for centuries, “The one rules and the other is ruled.”  The Bible also preached male superiority.  Under Jewish and later, Christian, teachings women, children, and slaves were not allowed to testify in court because they had “flighty minds” and women were routinely valued lower than men. 

         These prejudices shaped views on rape for millennia.  The accusation by the woman known only as “Potiphar’s wife” that the Hebrew prophet Joseph had raped her remained a symbol of falsehood for ages and was frequently depicted by artists like Rembrandt.  The fear of such an “uncorroborated” rape charge and the consequent protection of men constituted law until recently.  Up to 1972, a woman had to produce two witnesses to the act to prove rape in New York State, as well as show defensive wounds on her body.

         I and many others found Dr. Christine Blasey Ford’s assertion of sexual harassment against Brett Kavanaugh completely convincing.  She had done her best not to make this charge public: by writing Pres. Trump directly when he put Kavanaugh on his short list of nominees, by contacting her congressional representative and asking her to keep the news private, and then by writing Sen. Feinstein and making the same request.  When questioned, she did not seem at all partisan.  She admitted she was fearful and emotional, but kept those feelings under control.

         All this was used against her.  Why had she not come forward sooner?  (In my rape crisis program, we had a pamphlet called “I Never Told Anyone,” because this practice was so common.)  Why had she come forward at all?  How dare she “smear” this exemplary candidate?

         The candidate himself used all the tactics unavailable to a woman like Blasey Ford, but at his disposal as a straight man.  He showed extreme emotion, gulping and panting, crying and screaming.  He accused his accusers of being partisan “destroyers.”  He insisted that nothing could be corroborated.  When questions did not suit him, he turned them back on his questioners.  These tactics worked.  The eleven white male Republican senators on the committee instantly took his side.

         I have not used the word “white” before because of course this scenario occurred earlier, when the black Supreme Court candidate, Clarence Thomas, was accused of sexual harassment by a black law professor, Anita Hill.  Thomas also invoked male privilege, while adding the race card, charging that believing Hill would constitute a “high-tech lynching.” His tactic worked as well as Kavanaugh’s twenty-seven years later. 

Has anything changed since then?  Yes, there are more women in public office.  Yes, women have some more rights.  But still, as Sen. Patrick Leahy proclaimed on October 6, after declaring that he had voted in favor of many Republican judges, Kavanaugh “has been relentlessly dishonest under oath…I have never seen a nominee so casually willing to evade or deny the truth in service of his own raw ambition.”

         Complaining, as many others have, that only ten percent of Kavanaugh’s judicial record had been made available to the Judiciary Committee by its Republican majority, Leahy went on to denounce the “sham” FBI investigation.  Limited by Pres. Trump to last only one week and to question very few persons, it “fell short by design.”  Kavanaugh was voted in 50-48, almost completely on party lines.  The vote was marked by unprecedented demonstrations against it.

         Events like this have consequences, since they encourage those who share the same convictions.  Trump empowered Kavanaugh; Kavanaugh empowered, among others, an associate professor at Brooklyn College to write in his public blog, “If someone did not commit sexual assault in high school, then he is not a member of the male sex….The Democrats have become a party of tutu-wearing pansies, sissies who lack virility, a sense of decency or the masculine judgment that has characterized the greatest civilizations: classical Athens, republican Rome, and the nineteenth century United States.”  What did all three of these societies have in common?  They owned slaves and subordinated women.

         What can we do now?  By 1853, the eminent Quaker Lucretia Mott had fought for decades to end slavery and demand the vote for women. She declared, “Any great change must expect opposition, because it shakes the very foundation of privilege.”  Mott lived to see enslaved peoples’ emancipation, but died almost forty years before women’s suffrage became legal in the United States.  Like her, we must keep on keeping on. The most important effort now is to get out the Democratic vote on November 6.

        

"I Am Not A Member Of Any Organized Political Party -- I'm A Democrat"

     Attributed to the humorist Will Rogers in 1935, this saying is unfortunately still true today.  I must get emails from at least ten different Democratic groups each day: TrainDemocrats, Democratic Attorney Generals, Democratic Governors, Democrats for the Senate, the House, against gerrymandering, the Democratic Leadership Council, and Obama for America in addition to my two Democratic Senators, Gillibrand and Schumer, as well as pro-Democratic organizations I belong to, like MoveOn, the ACLU, and Emily's List.  Plus the Democratic candidates I support, like Beto O'Rourke, Jacky Rosen, and Danny O'Connell, as well.  The tone of these messages has become increasingly hectoring: "Does Bonnie Support Donald Trump?," or "We Are Counting On YOU To Fill Out This Survey!"  Every survey ends with an appeal for more funds and the more you give, the more you are asked to give.  

     Give me a break!  It's gotten so bad that I've begun to unsubscribe from these sites.  I would feel much better if these Democratic groups unified, worked together instead of separately, and convinced me they were an organized party.  The messages I'm most comfortable with are the ones that promote voter registration, urge voters to get out and vote, and to vote for whichever Democrat is running, not just their "perfect" candidate.  I know there's a split in the party between those who want to appeal to the center and those who favor more left-wing causes, but why do we have to choose?  A broad, successful political party can and should represent both factions.  That's the only way Democrats will succeed, not just this November, but in the future as well.

     In addition, as someone in her 70s, I don't want anymore leaders of my age.  It's time for a new generation to take over.  So, no, I don't support Bernie, Elizabeth Warren, or Joe Biden, no matter how much I like them or agree with them.  This goes for Nancy Pelosi as well.  Age diminishes energy in everyone and it's time for a change.  As the Republican Party has ceded its values and soul to Donald Trump, it's easy to call for a new Republican model.  But think it's high time for a new Democratic paradigm as well.  May it come soon!