( ENSPIRE News ) Celebrities, Dignitaries, First-Responders, and Other Essential Workers Are Stepping up to Help Mobilize Voters for the Runoff Elections
ENSPIRE Contributor: Anastasia Hanna
Continuous measures to subdue and annul Black voters’ voices in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Georgia have galvanized the Georgia Coalition for the Peoples’ Agenda (Peoples’ Agenda), Clayton County Black Women’s Roundtable (BWR), and other organizations to register, educate, and mobilize voters for the impending Senate runoff elections. Efforts to disenfranchise Black Americans have stirred the coalition to take initiative and expand their get-out-the-vote operations.
“We organize year-round in the Black community and voters trust us. We will motivate them to vote,” said Helen Butler, executive director of the Peoples’ Agenda. “Before civil rights leaders like Dr. King and the founder of the Peoples’ Agenda, Dr. Joseph Lowery, endured beatings and jail for us to have the right to vote, people used poll taxes, literacy tests, and even violence to stop us from voting. Today, instead of suppressing Black voters, their efforts are creating a groundswell of support.”
“We’ve received calls from across the country from people eager to help beyond the much-needed donations they’re making,” adds Felicia Davis convener of Clayton County BWR, a member of the Peoples’ Agenda coalition. “We need people outside of Georgia to help by calling their family and friends in Georgia and let them know to vote. With the Coronavirus raging, we’re encouraging voters to vote absentee by mail or early in-person to keep the lines at a minimum on Jan. 5.”
In addition to celebrities and dignitaries volunteering to make calls and produce robocalls and public service announcements, state affiliates of the NCBCP Unity ’20 Black Voting Campaign will keep their 2020 operations going to support Georgia GOTV activities. The Eastern Michigan Coalition on Black Civic Participation, Philly Unity Coalition, and Ohio Unity Coalition will help with phone banking, social media, texts, online events, and the Clayton County BWR postcard campaign.
Despite the challenges created by the COVID-19 virus, the Peoples’ Agenda has worked nonstop the entire year. They even spent Thanksgiving week training over 500 phone-bankers, registering and educating voters at turkey give-aways, and dispatching teams of canvassers to distribute flyers with voting information packaged with PPE door-to-door in communities throughout the state.
“It’s clear that expanding access to absentee voting boosted turnout,” said Butler. “The Peoples’ Agenda is working with our partners to make sure voters receive and return their absentee ballot requests. For those who want to vote in-person, we’re providing rides to the polls starting December 14 when early in-person voting begins.”
“This year we lost Dr. Lowery, Rev. C. T. Vivian, and Congressman John Lewis, three civil rights heroes whose sacrifices played a key role in the passing of the Voting Rights Act. Their memory fuels our resolve,” adds Davis, who also serves as director of HBCU Green Fund. “Our message to anyone trying to suppress or void Black votes is best communicated through a quote from Dr. Lowery, ‘We ain’t going back. We’ve come too far, marched too long, prayed too hard, wept too bitterly, bled too profusely, and died too young, to let anybody turn back the clock on our journey to justice.”
The Georgia Coalition for the Peoples’ Agenda is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization performing year-round voter registration, education, and mobilization in Black communities throughout Georgia. Led by board chair, Rev. J. A. Milner, the organization has headquarters in Atlanta and offices in Athens, Albany, Macon, Augusta, LaGrange, and Savannah. To donate or volunteer visit www.thepeoplesagenda.org email coalition@bellsouth.net or call the Peoples’ Agenda at (404) 653-1199.