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Tag Archives: political engagement

Day 52: Online Voter Registration!

12 Sep 2020 By Susan Barsy in Candidates and Campaigns Tags: 2020 election, election countdown, political engagement, US politics, voter registration, voting

NAACP poster detail

It’s easier than ever to register to vote, with many states now offering online registration.  Eligible residents who are not yet registered can do so from a computer or smart phone.  Here are a few of the states’ online registration sites.

Illinois: Online Voter Registration Application Form

Indiana: Register Online to Vote in Indiana

Iowa: Electronic Voter Registration Tool

Michigan: Online Voter Registration System

Minnesota: Register to Vote

Ohio: Online Voter Registration System

Pennsylvania: Online Voter Registration

Navigate through the VoteAmerica webpages for detailed information on registering and voting in every state and the District of Columbia.

Please forward this post to anyone you know who has recently moved or needs to register for the first time.

If you are an activist working on voter registration, VoteAmerica offers a sophisticated GOTV app, available for $2000/month.

Image: NAACP poster from this source.

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Day 55: Buttons for the People

9 Sep 2020 By Susan Barsy in Candidates and Campaigns Tags: 2020 election, buttons, Buttons for the People, political customs, political engagement, political ephemera, US politics

Bob and I like to give out campaign buttons if we can. Used to be, one could get them for free at a local campaign “headquarters,” but these days, such on-the-ground meeting spots are as rare as the ivory-billed woodpecker. Beyond that, campaigns increasingly demand payment for political ephemera instead of giving it away for free. Obtaining buttons in bulk, especially ones that are American-made and made by true-Blue believers, is far more difficult than it used to be.

The most promising source I’ve found so far is River Wolfe’s Buttons for the People. Wolfe is a free-lance artist and activist based in Columbus, Ohio, who designs and makes a huge variety of custom pins. Her buttons promote peace, love, liberal values, and fun! Shop this page for 2020 political campaign buttons and this one for buttons that speak more generally to liberal and egalitarian themes.

The button is perhaps my favorite form of political swag. I don’t wear t-shirts or baseball caps. I don’t drive enough for a bumper sticker to make sense. Buttons for the People carries on an old political tradition, with new messages such as “Disarm Hate” and “Voting Is My Superpower” that capture the aspirations and goals of Americans now.

If you don’t need buttons in bulk and are willing to pay more for single buttons, check out the lapel pins sold by the online retail store Support 2020. It sells mainly Biden-Harris accessories at good prices, but the items are not necessarily American-made. A final option for American-made merchandise is the official store of the Biden campaign. A range of buttons, some sporting Joe’s favorite sayings and others featuring his characteristic aviator sunglasses, are available. Proceeds go to to the Biden Victory Fund.

Image: River Wolfe’s “Do Not Keep Calm” button,
from Buttons for the People.com.

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Day 56: Dial, Text, Write

8 Sep 2020 By Susan Barsy in Candidates and Campaigns Tags: 2020 election, political engagement, turnout, voters 1 Comment

If you’re looking for a convenient way to help get out the vote, this Indivisible portal may be for you. There you can sign up to phonebank, textbank, or write postcards to never voters or semi-frequent voters, urging them to Vote Blue.

“Wake up on November 4th knowing you did everything in your power to make Donald Trump a one-term president.” Amen.

Image: from this source.

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Speaking Out On Politics

22 Oct 2014 By Susan Barsy in Autobiographical Tags: 2014, citizenship, Kirsten Gillibrand, Leon Panetta, Malala, midterm elections, political engagement, US politics, women

The path to autumn, © 2014 Susan Barsy
Finding time for politics isn’t easy.  Lately, my blog has suffered as I revise my book about political families in 19th-century Washington DC.  At the end of the work day, I come home and watch the Newshour and practice my old habit of talking back to the TV—an easy, weirdly comforting form of political expression that—alas!—is far less efficacious than writing something.  Political speech needs a community in order to matter.

Ironically, the message that we have to speak out has been all over TV.  On one recent night, I caught Leon Panetta discussing his new memoir with Judy Woodruff.  The core of the former defense secretary’s message?

This is a serious time in our history in 2014.  It’s a serious time with regard to, what direction is this country going to take?  We have got a Washington that’s largely dysfunctional in a stalemate.  We’re not dealing with the principal issues facing this country.  We’re dealing with a series of threats abroad.

It isn’t just ISIS.  We’re dealing with North Korea.  We’re dealing with Iran.  We’re dealing with Russia.  We’re dealing with cyber-attacks.  It is an unprecedented set of threats . . . This is a time to open up debate.  . . .  What is it we need to do?  What can we learn from the past, and how do we get together to provide the leadership that’s necessary to keep this country strong?  I think that’s the right debate.  And I think people ought to embrace that debate, because that’s what makes our country what it is.

Meanwhile, Kirsten Gillibrand, US senator from New York, has been on the circuit promoting her book about political engagement.  She seems to be styling herself as a political Sheryl Sandberg.  Gillibrand has written a ‘Lean-In‘ kind of book, Off the Sidelines, directed specifically at encouraging American women to speak out in politics and become more involved in public life.

Gillibrand’s message is timely, roughly coinciding with the announcement that young Malala Yousafzai is one of this year’s recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize (the other being Kailash Satyarthi, who won for his tireless work on behalf of children who are trafficked and enslaved).  Worldwide, Malala has come to embody political bravery, continuing to speak out on behalf of girls’ education in the Islamic world despite death threats and a gunman’s attack that nearly ended her life.  Her deep yet unshowy convictions, coupled with eloquence beyond her years, make her one of today’s most potent models of activism.

By comparison, our current campaign season is bankrupt, impoverished.  Urgent inspiring calls for action and the charismatic nobility of exemplary actors: both are missing.  Leadership is something more than what polling, marketing, and moneymen like the Koch brothers can supply.

The negative style of campaigning so prevalent today is shameful because it denies the country of what needs most, which is fresh ideas.  Finding the dirt and making it stick calls for a very different skill set than what is required to run this magnificent but badly turned-around country of ours.  For that, we need brave actors who can get out ahead of the electorate and chart a path forward.

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We Need New Talents and New Political Parties

4 Dec 2012 By Susan Barsy in Political Innovation Tags: corruption, Democrats, gridlock, ideology, political culture, political engagement, political parties, Republicans, third parties, Whig Party 2 Comments

The Political Sodom and Gomorrah Are Doomed To Destruction (Courtesy Library of Congress)B

The nauseating staleness of partisan politics is a disgrace to the American intellect and a nation fond of thinking it’s great.

Whether one ponders the intransigence gripping the Capitol or the never-ending corruption strangling government at every level in Illinois, one sees the evils of a too-entrenched party system—a system that can only be shaken up by innovative third parties, bringing with them new ideological visions and the threat of competition.

Much of what appears on Our Polity springs from the conviction that our political parties are poorly positioned for the challenges the US faces.  The parties are entrenched bureaucracies, most concerned about their own futures as institutions, with the fate of the Republican Party, in particular, now overshadowing its members’ patriotism and concern for the country.

Our political system need not remain in this state.  Throughout time, the electorate’s loyalties have been organized around many other platforms, goals, and ideas.  In the early part of our history, firm party loyalties didn’t even exist.  Instead, coalitions of voters formed and re-formed dynamically around the most promising ideas and leaders.  In the seventy-some years before the Civil War, many political parties and factions came to life, fluidly combining and recombining with others to advance some vital cause or interest, catapulting their standard-bearers to prominence before they died.

Many of our greatest statesmen, including such luminaries as Thomas Jefferson, Henry Clay, Charles Sumner, and Abraham Lincoln, rose to power as the stars of parties that no longer exist.   Instead, parties of adherents amassed around their far-seeing talent and ideas, giving them the political power and authority that they needed.

When I’m despondent about the state of American politics today, I think back to these other by-gone parties, which bespeak other ideological visions around which American politics could be organized.

What about the short-lived Whig Party, for example, which flourished in the early 19th century and was a bridge between the too-aristocratic Federalist party (d. circa 1820) and the anti-federal Republican Party (b. circa 1860) we have today?  The Whigs were a progressive party: they were pro-business, but they saw federalism as a positive force necessary to bind up the wayward states into a nation that was both powerful and refined.  Whigs were sophisticated and cosmopolitan.  They stood in opposition to the Democrats, who were the states-rights, laissez-faire proponents of the time.  The Whigs championed independence and personal prosperity, but they thought that individual opportunity could be best safeguarded and maximized through the agency of an active federalism.  Yet they differed from present-day Democrats in being the foes of corruption and a patronage state.

The constellation of ideas that animated the Whigs is only one instance of a different ideology that Americans could be using to reorganize their politics now.  The purpose of political parties is to organize large masses of voters around constructive and unifying national goals.  Since both the Democrats and Republicans have lost their power to thrill, rising talents would be wise to conjure up new parties now.

Image: Friedrich Graetz’s 1882 lithograph, “The Political Sodom and Gomorrah Are Doomed to Destruction,” shows the angel of a new party leading political honesty and wisdom out of the fires of public condemnation consuming the Republican and Democratic parties.
From this source.

RELATED ARTICLES:

  • Tribal Voting Behavior Means The Republican Party Could Go The Way Of the Whigs (pjmedia.com)
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