'A Lot at Stake.' Inside the Grassroots Efforts to Mobilize Hundreds of Black Voters in Georgia In Georgia, where voters could make ...
In Georgia, where voters could make history Tuesday by electing Americaâs first black female governor and bucking a 20-year-old pattern of sending a Republican into the stateâs top office, civil rights leaders know every last-ditch effort counts.
âThereâs a lot at stake in this state,â says Cliff Albright, who cofounded Black Voters Matter, a nonprofit that works to increase voter registration in black communities. âGiven everything thatâs happening in the country over the past couple of yearsâ"the increase in hate, the increase in voter suppressionâ"itâs just a critical time.â
Black Voters Matter and other local groups that represent minority communities have shuttled hundreds of voters to polling sites on Election Day as Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams and Republican candidate Brian Kemp faced off in a race thatâs expected to come down to the wire. If she wins, Abrams, a 44-year-old former House Democratic leader, would be the first black woman to serve as governor in American history. A Democrat hasnât been elected governor in Georgia since 1998, according to the Associated Press.
âItâs symbolic on so many levels,â said Albright, 48, of Atlanta. âFor some people, particularly folks who are 80 or 90-years-old, whoâve lived in Georgia their whole lives, that might be more symbolic than when President Obama won in 2008.â
Mobilizing voters in Georgia has also become increasingly important since the state is one of many where new laws have led to complaints of voter suppression. Under legislation passed last year, a personâs voter registration application in Georgia must exactly match the information on their driverâs license and Social Security card. Even the most minor difference could stall registration and discourage the democratic process, critics of the change feared.
Kempâs campaign has also come under scrutiny for conflict of interest concerns since the candidate oversees state elections, including his own, in his current role as Georgiaâs secretary of state. According to the Associated Press, Kemp is also accused of purging more than 1.4 million voter registrations since 2012â"a claim his campaign has denied. Another AP analysis found that Kempâs office was holding 53,000 voter registrations. Nearly 70% of the applicants on hold were black. Ryan Mahoney, a spokesman for Kemp, told the AP that Kemp was only following voting laws, adding that his opponents were âfakingâ their outrage. âThe 53,000 âpendingâ voters can cast a ballot just like any other Georgia voter,â Mahoney said.
On Tuesday, at the Urban League of Greater Columbus, which has been providing low-income residents free rides to the polls, phones have been ringing nonstop. In Columbus, Ga., nearly two-dozen volunteers have been dispatched to pick up voters from their homes or from homeless shelters. The group received more than 200 calls on Tuesday for pick-ups, which organizers say is more than they received during the 2016 presidential election.
âThatâs huge,â says the groupâs president, Susan Cooper. âThe number of people that are calling for rides is an indication of what I believe is how theyâre turning out at the voter polls. It is phenomenal.â
About 70% of the callers were older than 65, Cooper says, and a large majority were black. According to Albright, of Black Voters Matter, thatâs a sign that black communities in the south are becoming more civically engaged as more qualified women and minorities run for office.
âSome major changes are happening in the south,â he says. âBlack communities are playing a critical role and trying to take charge of the direction their communities are going in. Theyâre trying to take control of their destinies.â
âThis is the most important election,â Albright added. âWe change the south, we change the nation.â
Many people who packed the polls agreed. That includes Stephen Bailey, a local church leader who has been shepherding voters to polling sites all day. The 45-year-old deacon at St. James Missionary Baptist Church cast his own ballot while transporting homeless people to the polls.
âIâm voting for change,â he says, shortly after dropping off nine passengers. âI donât care how long it takes. Iâm going to get every soul to the polls.â
Gabriella Demczuk is a photographer based in Washington D.C. Follow her on Instagram @gdemczuk.
Melissa Chan is a TIME Reporter. Follow her on Twitter @melissalchan.
Contact us at editors@time.com.
Source: Google News | Netizen 24 United States
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