There seems to be a continued effort to malign Black activists and the people who represent them, so here is a brief thread on what I saw happen this election.
First, polls consistently show that Black Lives Matter is more popular than ever. A majority of Americans support the movement by *28 points*, a stark increase from just earlier this year. nytimes.com/interactive/20…
Despite this, Trump explicitly used racism in an effort to win white suburban voters, repeatedly invoking loaded language like “thugs” and “riots.” cnn.com/2020/06/20/us/…
That failed. For all the focus on the supposed failures of the movement, Democrats made gains with white suburban voters, especially where racial justice was a major issue.
In my own state and district (the site of George Floyd’s murder), white suburban voters turned out in record numbers for Democrats. Many of them explicitly cited racial justice as a major reason. nytimes.com/2020/11/16/us/…
When people single out a slogan like “Defund” as a catch-all excuse for underperformance, they are undermining a movement of Black activists who stared down police repression as they demanded change in the streets.
They're also playing into the Republican efforts to distort the success and popularity of the movement.
It is the job of activists to gain attention for their cause. It is the job of elected officials to translate those cries for justice into popular legislation.
We do not win by shrinking away from the cause of justice. We win by organizing, meeting people where they are, and communicating a clear value set.
Those who fear justice will continue to use fear and misinformation to smear us. They did it during Jim Crow. They did it in the Civil Rights movement. Our job as Democrats is to have an affirmative values-based message that combats that.
We did that this election and we won. We should be proud of that. Let’s continue to organize and use our mandate to pursue the America we all deserve. Onward.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Trump began his presidency by backing out of the Iran nuclear deal, imposing crippling sanctions on the people of Iran, and further empowering the brutal regime there, and risking a nuclear conflict.
Iran now has 12 times more enriched uranium than would have been permitted under the agreement.
The work @JCA_MN is doing around antisemitism and housing justice is so critical. Especially moved by their deep canvass work - work that our party should emulate. givemn.org/organization/J…
“We’re turning out this vote to get to the starting line of the real work that is to come…That’s when the real work begins.” - @aoc
“I want you to think about your community, the person that you might’ve lost during this pandemic, the person that lost a job, the person that is waiting for us to pass a COVID relief package and so much more.” - @RashidaTlaib
But what if you aren’t lucky enough to live in Minnesota 😉? Don’t worry. Got you covered. In Wisconsin, cities and towns set their own locations, but typically are at your municipal clerk's office.
In Minnesota, we know that organized people will always beat organized money.
Tonight, our movement didn’t just win. We earned a mandate for change. Despite outside efforts to defeat us, we once again broke turnout records.
Despite the attacks, our support has only grown.
This election isn’t about me. It’s about an agenda rooted in people’s everyday struggles—and the corporations and rightwing donors who are threatened by it.
It’s about standing up to a President who promised to ban an entire group of people from this country based solely on their Muslim identity, calls our countries of origin ‘shithole countries,’ and threatened to send us back to where we came from.