Virus or no virus, Service Employees and allies to mobilize 3 million voters
Union janitors who are members of SEIU Local 87 in San Francisco. | SEIU

WASHINGTON—Coronavirus or no coronavirus, the Service Employees and three other progressive organizations rolled out a $30 million campaign to register and mobilize three million new voters—women, people of color, and union members—for the fall election.

But the pandemic, which has killed over 92,000 people nationwide as of this writing and sickened over 1.5 million in the U.S., has forced changes in the way SEIU, Color of Change, Planned Parenthood, and Community Change Action will tackle the task.

The Win Justice Campaign, similar to one SEIU and Color of Change ran in the 2018 midterms, aims to register and ensure those millions of people vote in four states considered key to the presidential result: Florida, Minnesota, Nevada, and Wisconsin.

Helped by GOP voter suppression schemes in 2016, then-nominee Donald Trump narrowly won Florida and Wisconsin. He narrowly lost Minnesota and was trounced in Nevada.

“Working people, whether on the frontlines of this public health crisis or struggling in this economic crisis, are more engaged in politics now than in any election in our lifetimes,” SEIU President Mary Kay Henry said in a statement. “Working people are making their voices heard loud and clear in this election that we must protect all workers—especially after being asked to risk their lives by going to work without protective equipment or hazard pay.”

The campaign, Henry said, will concentrate on “deep engagement with Black, brown, and Asian-Pacific Islander voters.”

Its key point, she added, will be that “we can’t return to normal” after the pandemic ends, and that means electing leaders responsive to people and not to the 1% and the chasm of inequality they created “long before” the coronavirus hit, and which the pandemic amplified.

“We rewrite the rules, rebuild the economy based on workers’ power, and reinvest in communities,” she declared.

Jenny Lawson, executive director of Planned Parenthood Votes, the reproductive rights group’s political arm, said the campaign “will be multilingual and lean on trusted community messengers to mobilize voters, including a robust virtual organizing effort that includes phone, text, mail, and digital, as well as paid advertising on TV, radio, and digital platforms.”

It’ll also emphasize “reaching the communities who have been targeted by the Trump and silenced by this administration and the people in power—from voters of color, to immigrants, to young people, to women. Enough is enough: While our country’s health care needs continue to rise in the face of a global pandemic, it’s time for the politicians who attack our health care and our reproductive rights to lose their jobs.

“Sitting on the sidelines is simply not an option.”

In the past, the four organizations, especially SEIU, have relied heavily on face-to-face, door-to-door voter registration, organizing, mobilization, and get-out-the-vote efforts. With social distancing and quarantining likely to still pervade society during the runup to the November balloting, that will partially change, Miranda Margowsky, spokeswoman for the coalition, e-mailed.

“We’ll combine digital tools with traditional methods to connect with these voters,” she explained. But those “traditional methods” will have new wrinkles, too: “In-person field organizing if health officials deem it safe,” more phone calls, personalized postcards rather than mass mailings, and, where they can, “one-on-one conversations,” coalition leaders said.

When the people of color, workers, and young people vote, “they consistently vote for more progressive candidates and policies,” including for climate justice, comprehensive immigration reform, social, economic and legal justice, and women’s rights said Color of Change PAC spokesperson Rashad Robinson in a statement.

“Real and consistent efforts to incorporate these voters and their specific voices into policymaking and politics would not only make our communities more just and equitable, but also shift power to the people that are too often overlooked.”

Like free stuff? So do we. Here at People’s World, we believe strongly in the mission of keeping the labor and democratic movements informed so they are prepared for the struggle. But we need your help. While our content is free for readers (something we are proud of) it takes money — a lot of it — to produce and cover the stories you see in our pages. Only you, our readers and supporters, can keep us going. Only you can make sure we keep the news that matters free of paywalls and advertisements. If you enjoy reading People’s World and the stories we bring you, support our work by becoming a $5 monthly sustainer today.


CONTRIBUTOR

Mark Gruenberg
Mark Gruenberg

Award-winning journalist Mark Gruenberg is head of the Washington, D.C., bureau of People's World. He is also the editor of the union news service Press Associates Inc. (PAI). Known for his reporting skills, sharp wit, and voluminous knowledge of history, Mark is a compassionate interviewer but tough when going after big corporations and their billionaire owners.

Comments

comments