Friday, November 13, 2020

Killing of reporter adds to grim toll of violence against Mexican journalists

David Agren in Mexico City 

Early on Monday morning, Israel Vázquez, a crime reporter in the Mexican city of Salamanca, received a tip that a plastic bag full of human remains had been dumped at the side of a street.

He reached the scene before the police, but as he prepared to broadcast on Facebook live, gunmen opened fire from a passing car, and shot him eight times. He died of his injuries later in the day.

He was the third Mexican journalist to be murdered in less than two weeks – and the eighth this year.

Jesús Alfonso Piñuelas, founder of two media outlets in Sonora state, was shot dead on 2 November. Arturo Alba Medina, a TV host in Ciudad Juárez was shot on 29 October as he drove through the border city. Press reports say he was struck by 10 bullets.

© Photograph: David Guzman Gonzalez/EPA A Mexican journalist holds a placard that reads ‘they are killing us’ during a protest demanding protection after colleagues were threatened by organized crime, in Acapulco last month.

The string of killings has cemented Mexico’s place as one of the world’s deadliest countries for members of the press, and underscored the risks facing journalists who cover sensitive subjects such as crime, politics and the security forces.

Related: Mexico’s human rights chief draws fury for asking if journalists have been killed

“You want to kill a journalist, you can do it without much of a chance that you’ll be caught,” said Jan-Albert Hootsen, Mexico representative of the press freedom group the Committee to Protect Journalists.

In at least five cases, the journalists’ murders were directly related to their work, Hootsen said. It remains unclear if Piñuelas and Alba’s deaths were linked to their journalism, but such cases are seldom investigated with any rigor, he said.

“There’s an ongoing crisis of violence and impunity. Since successive Mexican governments haven’t made any serious attempts to combat impunity, the situation has gotten steadily worse.”

In 2019, Mexico suffered the second highest number of killings after war-torn Syria, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ).

Vázquez, 31, had only been a journalist for three years, but he was well-regarded by his colleagues at the digital news outlet El Salmantino. He covered sports as well as crime, and often took the night shift.

Like most Mexican reporters, he knew that his work involved a certain degree of self-censorship in the name of survival, said co-workers.

“He was a person who was very careful with his broadcasts,” said Verónica Espinosa, Guanajuato correspondent for the news weekly Proceso. “He didn’t give sensitive details” in his reports.

Guanajuato, which surrounds Salamanca, has seen soaring violence as rival crime groups jockey for drug trafficking routes, extortion rackets and control of the lucrative market in stolen gasoline.

Journalists in the state routinely take extra security precautions, said Espinosa: working in teams, publishing without bylines and omitting potentially sensitive details from their stories.

But such safety measures are not always enough. Víctor Manuel Jiménez, a reporter at Rotativo Digital Guanajuato – another local news outlet – left home on 1 November to attend a baseball game in the city of Celaya and never returned.

The official response to such crimes has often been half-hearted. When reporters in Salamanca demanded a meeting with the local mayor, Betty Hernández, after Vázquez’s murder, they were stunned when she appeared to blame him for his death.

“The truth is, look, going at six or five in the morning to cover a story in that place, which everyone knows is dangerous,” Hernández said, in video of the meeting.

“But we’re journalists!” one person can be heard responding.

Esponosa said the mayor’s response was “absurd” but typical of the way Mexican officials often imply that victims like Vásquez are culpable in their own deaths. “It criminalizes him and makes him responsible for security conditions that are not the responsibility of a citizen, much less a journalist,” she said.

Related: Mexico police open fire on femicide protest in Cancún

Journalists covering protests have also come under attack in Mexico.

On the same day Vázquez was murdered, four journalists were injured, when police in the city of Cancún opened fire on a crowd protesting against femicides.

Activists called for the march after the murder of a woman named Bianca Alejandrina Lorenza, 20, whose dismembered body was found in a plastic bag at the weekend. When members of the group attempted to storm the local city hall, police opened fire with live ammunition.
Armenians flee homes as Azerbaijan takeover looms

Villagers in the mountainous hamlet of Nor Getashen in disputed territory in Azerbaijan pile sofas, washing machines and suitcases outside their homes as they prepare to flee.
© Alexander NEMENOV The district of Kalbajar is being handed over to Azerbaijan by Armenian separatists as part of a peace deal

The settlement is part of the Kalbajar district that is being handed over to Azerbaijan by Armenian separatists on Sunday as part of a Russian-brokered peace agreement that ended weeks of fierce fighting between the longstanding rivals.
© Alexander NEMENOV Armenians pack their belongings as they leave their house in Kalbajar, which is being handed over to Azerbaijan

Clashes broke out at the end of September between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region that broke away from Baku's control in the 1990s. More than 1,400 people have died.

Residents of Nor Getashen worry they will face retaliatory attacks by Azerbaijan if they remain in their homes in the rugged region after the handover deadline Sunday.

"I cried all night when I heard the news," says 68-year-old Hayastan Yeghiazaryan, wearing a worn tracksuit.

She hastily sifts through belongings in the home heated by a wood burning stove to decide what to leave behind.

Next to her, a jar of pickled red peppers sits on a bed without a mattress and enamel crockery, chipped from old age, is lying among pairs of boots and books in Cyrillic.

In front of a workbench, Yeghiazaryan's 82-year-old husband Zohrab, who is struggling to decide what to take, says he is not even sure where they will go.

- 'We were happy here' -

"With the help of the children, we'll try to rent a small apartment in Yerevan," he says, referring to the capital of Armenia, which has been rocked by political unrest since the country's leadership agreed to the peace accord that cedes swathes of territory in Karabakh to Azerbaijan.

"We might be able to come back, don't you think?" he says with a hopeful look.

Kalbajar's residents were encouraged to settle in this region of Azerbaijan by separatist leaders who had grabbed control of the area.

No one has ordered them to leave their homes, Yeghiazaryan says, "but we quickly understood that there is no choice".

Her two sons came from Yerevan to help her pack up the home and sell off the cattle before Sunday.

"The house is not very luxurious, but we were happy here," Zohrab says sadly.

Media reported that residents of Kalbajar were setting alight their homes, preferring to destroy their dwellings than leave them to Azerbaijan.

But in Nor Getashen most of the abandoned homes were left standing.

"We will not burn down the house. But we will take Mickey, he's a good dog," Zohrab adds.

On the edge of the village, which already resembles a ghost town, a couple in their sixties is busy filling a large truck.

"We are going to leave the cows. We didn't find anyone in time to buy them," says a mother of seven, letting out a sob.

They will leave the house intact, she added, "but those who will come to take it do not deserve it".

hba-acl/jbr/mbx
Trump asked aides if he could pursue a wild plan to replace the Electoral College with loyalists who would ignore the vote, report says
© BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images 
President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia on Wednesday. 

President Donald Trump has asked aides about a plan to remain in office by subverting the Electoral College, The New York Times reported Thursday.

Under the plan, GOP-controlled state legislatures would ignore the popular vote in swing states and appoint Trump loyalists as electors to secure the president a second term.

Business Insider reported earlier Thursday that the plan was gaining currency among some Trump supporters — despite how unlikely it is to work.

Experts say the plan, though technically possible, would face enormous legal and political obstacles.

The Times' sources stressed that though Trump had asked about the plan, he did not seem to entertain it seriously.

President Donald Trump has asked top aides about a wild plan that involves replacing electors in swing states with loyalists to secure himself a second term, The New York Times reported on Thursday.

The Times report came hours after Business Insider reported that the plan was gaining currency among Trump allies.


The plan hinges on Republican state legislatures deciding to ignore the states' results and instead send a new group of electors to the Electoral College who would cast their votes for Trump.

Such a plan, while technically possible, has been widely dismissed by experts as unworkable in practice and an affront to US democracy. Business Insider's report noted some of the problems with making it work.

Citing sources familiar with Trump's activities, The Times reported that the president pressed his advisors about the plan at a meeting on Wednesday.

"It was not a detailed conversation, or really a serious one," and did not reflect any "obsessive desire" of Trump to remain in office, the report described the sources as saying.

Read more: EXCLUSIVE: Documents reveal Trump is building his own 'deep state' by leaving political appointees behind in government for the Biden administration

Trump has made no public statement since Insider projected Joe Biden to win the presidency on Friday and other major news organizations called the race for him on Saturday.

He has spent time playing golf, watching cable news, and tweeting accusations of electoral fraud, many of which Twitter has labeled misleading.

According to reports, top advisors have admitted privately that Trump's lawsuits challenging vote counts in swing states are unlikely to succeed.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Comments 16


S W1h
So he claims the election was stolen without evidence, now he wants to actually steal it, back? … solid con man move!
LikeReply
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Norris Gillen3h
Mr. Trump...Wow...Guess he is forgetting about the war for independence. So he wants to be King of the USA... So, it would be, H.R.H, King Trump....He really should consider becoming Baby Huey...He is acting more like that...
LikeReply
8Report



Kenny Walsh4h
Does this man .. Realize it was the American People themselves that voted. Please Mr. Trump come down to Reality Please!. Except the results. Nobody is trying to fraud you. You Lost fair and square. Come Back in 4 years and run again. But please give this up. Your really being outrages now. What your doing right now is only going to make things harder on you.
All most people will do now is only throw cracks at you .. And make fun of you.See more
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Tommy lee6h
If this incident is true, this man should be removed by force immediately
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Mike Davis6h
Your country really has a split personality - both ends of each spectrum seem unmovable. Maybe entertain a third party? From what we see from afar is democracy is under attack.
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F B7h
These are Dictator tactics any any GOP allies who take this seriously need to be locked up for treason against the state. Desperate ideology. The election needs to be certified period and move on with the transition.
LikeReply
28Report



stuart renouf7h
love how it was okay for the dems to say they will do this but !!!!!!
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stuart renouf7h
it is amazing that the media is continuing to lie like this
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ski hi558h
Throw that con in jail.
Donny song.

And now, the end is near
And so I face the final curtain
My friends, I'll say it clear
I'll state my case of which I'm certain
I've lived a life that's full of LIES
I traveled each and every highway
But more, much more than this
I COULDN"T GET IT MY WAY.See more
After Biden win, Black activists demand reparations for slavery, police reform


When President-elect Joe Biden addressed supporters last week to accept the highest office in the land, he took a moment to thank one specific group of Americans.

“When this campaign was at its lowest, the African American community stood up again for me,” Biden said. “They always have my back, and I’ll have yours.”

Leading Black Lives Matter activists plan to hold him and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris to that I.O.U. with a vengeance.

In a tumultuous election year, one that both gave rise to a new civil rights movement in response to the death of George Floyd and saw Black Americans suffer disproportionately from the COVID-19 pandemic and staggeringly high unemployment, Black Lives Matter activists are asking the new administration to make Black matters paramount.


“For decades, Black people have shown up time and time again for a country that consistently tells us that our lives don’t matter,” said Mary Hooks, a founding member of Black Lives Matter Atlanta and co-director of Southerners on New Ground, a social justice advocacy organization. “Beyond a cheap thank you, we need this administration to be bold and unapologetic about paying that debt through enacting policy changes.”
© Courtesy of Mary Hooks Mary Hooks, with black T-shirt, speaks in front of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia. Hooks is a key leader in the city's Black Lives Matter chapter.

After Biden accepted the presidency, Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors wrote an open letter to Biden and Harris saying “we want something for our vote” and asked for an immediate meeting.

To date, no meeting has been set, which is concerning, said Melina Abdullah, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Los Angeles and co-director of Black Lives Matter Grassroots, a national organizing arm of the organization.

“Hopefully this is just a delay,” said Abdullah, who also is a professor of Pan-African studies at California State University, Los Angeles. “We need to be sure this administration realizes that Black people voted out Donald Trump. Because of us, we saw a massive turnout and a rejection of blatant racism.”

The degree to which the incoming administration works with groups such as Black Lives Matter will help answer a larger unresolved question: how much influence will the progressive arm of the Democratic party have over a career centrist such as Biden and Harris, a former California attorney general, during the biggest reckoning on civil rights and racism since the 1960s?

While the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was a milestone achievement anchored by Martin Luther King, Jr., that landmark legislation far from erased the hurdles facing Black Americans, whose educational and economic opportunities continue to be stymied by legacies of slavery and systemic racism that surfaced in the form of redlining, redistricting and other restrictive measures
.
© Amy Harris, Amy Harris/Invision/AP Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors poses for a photo at the Summit LA18 in Los Angeles in 2018.

Biden has promised to assemble a cabinet that includes voices from across the Democratic spectrum. Despite charges by Trump and Vice President Mike Pence that Biden and Harris will "defund, dismantle, and dissolve police departments," the Democratic leaders do not support defunding the police. It remains to be seen how Biden and his team will handle other demands from Black leaders.

Biden should 'acknowledge' BLM


Biden’s acceptance speech nod to Black voters and his choice of vice presidents — Harris being the first woman and first Black and South Asian American in the position — suggest the incoming president is aware he has debts to pay, says Todd Boyd, the Katherine and Frank Price endowed chair for the study of race and popular culture at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

“There seems to be a consciousness on Biden’s part that African Americans had a lot to do with him being victorious,” said Boyd. “As to whether Black Lives Matter in particular has leverage, well, they’re not a huge lobbying group like the National Rifle Association. But that doesn’t mean they don’t get acknowledged.”

It is not an overstatement to say that Biden's campaign was brought back from the dead by a March primary victory in South Carolina fueled by the work of South Carolina Congressman and House Majority Whip James Clyburn, who is Black and was an organizer during the 1960s civil rights movement. That endorsement soon had a snowball effect.
© Matt Rourke, AP Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden, right, and The Rev. Al Sharpton, left, listen to Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., speak Feb. 26, at the National Action Network South Carolina Ministers' Breakfast

Although Trump gained some ground with Black male voters this election, African Americans in crucial swing states such as Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania and recount-poised Georgia were instrumental in delivering the White House to Democrats.

In return, Black activists say, the winning ticket must take immediate action on matters such as health care, housing, education and, perhaps most paramount, police reform.

A Biden administration could provide a swift change in how law enforcement tactics are discussed across the nation. Trump has repeatedly voiced support for officers while calling those protesting for change "left-wing mobs," a stark contrast to the previous Obama administration where Biden served as vice president.

After the officer-involved deaths in 2014 of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner in New York City, President Barack Obama established the President's Task Force on 21st Century Policing, which pushed for such killings to be investigated by independent prosecutors.

Since Obama left office, Black Lives Matter, which was founded in 2013 after the acquittal of Trayvon Martin's killer, has become a leading voice on civil rights issues. The loosely organized movement gathered renewed momentum following the death of Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers on Memorial Day.

Despite social distancing mandates spurred by COVID-19, protests attended by diverse groups of Americans spread across the nation. The movement soon began calling for an outright defunding of police departments. Although some Democrats bristle at the slogan — including Clyburn, who recently warned that the defund battle cry “is killing our party” — activists are resolute.

“Our clarion call was defund the police,” said Abdullah, the Los Angeles organizer. “That might not resonate within the core of the Democratic party, but it resonates with people on the streets.”  
© VALERIE MACON, AFP via Getty Images 
Civic leader and co-founder of the Black Lives Matter Los Angeles chapter, Melina Abdullah, poses for a photo after voting at the Staples Center early on November 3.

In Abdullah’s hometown, voters just approved Measure J, also known as “Reimagine LA County,” which requires that 10% of the city’s unrestricted general funds be invested in social services and alternatives to incarceration.

“That slogan means what it means, we can’t keep investing in a system that harms people of color and expect a different result,” said Angela Waters Austin, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Michigan, based in Lansing, and CEO of the activist non-profit One Love Global.

Like many activists of color, Waters Austin supports the national passage of The Breathe Act, a project of the non-profit Movement for Black Lives that proposes sweeping changes to the way tax dollars are allocated, emphasizing social programs over incarceration and providing grants to promote environmental health and social justice.
Education, housing also pressing for Black activists

Other social issues also need attention, said Marcus McDonald, founder of an independent chapter of Black Lives Matter in Charleston, South Carolina.

“Trump set us back in so many ways, so I’m hoping this new administration will quickly take action on things such as funding public education and embracing the Fair Housing Act,” said McDonald, CEO of Adesso Entertainment. “Biden has a chance to once again make things non-partisan. Affordable health care, wearing a mask, things like that there’s no middle ground on.”
© Courtesy Marcus McDonald
 Marcus McDonald is founder of an independent chapter of Black Lives Matter in Charleston, South Carolina.

Atlanta activist Hooks does not shy away from a defund the police demand — “It is a lifeline we need to save ourselves and future generations,” she said. But she also is keen to push for a range of other changes from a Biden-Harris presidency.

With COVID-19 disproportionately hospitalizing and killing people of color, Biden “must prioritize a stimulus package that halts evictions,” she said. What’s more, beyond implementing the federal Breathe Act, the new president must expand Medicaid, expand rights for the LGBTQ community, and set a “dignified” federal minimum wage.

“Lastly,” Hooks added, “we need reparations for the descendants of Africans both here and abroad, period.”

In many ways, Black Lives Matter activists pushing a progressive agenda on mainstream politicians is part of a time-honored approach to achieving incremental societal change, said Omar Wasow, assistant professor of political science at Princeton University in New Jersey and an expert on protest movements.

“There’s always been a classic tension between insiders and outsiders, where popular movements are purposefully more extreme in their views than those of officials in power,” said Wasow. “Now we’re starting to see more subtle arguments, such as a rethinking of how much funding goes to armed officers and how much maybe should go to people who help those with mental health issues, many of whom are killed by police officers.”

Tanya Faison, founder of Black Lives Matter Sacramento, has been in the streets for years fighting for social justice. The city came to a boil in 2018 after Stephon Clark, a 22-year-old Black man, was killed by two police officers who shot him in the back after mistaking his cell phone for a gun.

More recently, flag-waving Trump truck caravans rumbled through the state capital, which made her cast doubts on the possibility of a Democratic win.
© BOB STRONG Tanya Faison, in white shirt, confronts police officers during a Black Lives Matter protest. Faison is founder of the Black Lives Matter Sacramento chapter in California.

Biden and Harris’s victory “was surprising and is positive,” but it is not a cause for unguarded celebration, she said.

She pointed out that for many in the Black community, Biden's missteps include his 1994 Crime Bill, a “tough on crime” law signed by President Bill Clinton that led to a surge in incarcerations, as well as his defense of Clarence Thomas during his Supreme Court nomination hearing when Anita Hill’s charges of sexual assault were questioned.

As for Harris, who served as California’s attorney general and the district attorney of San Francisco, Faison said she has come under fire by activists for a track record that includes refusing to prosecute police officers.

“This election was about getting Trump out, but I don’t see a lot of enthusiasm behind Biden,” she said. “We have to move away from believing police without questioning anything."

Black Lives Matter Sacramento, like many other Black Lives Matter chapters, did not endorse a candidate during this election. Rather, Faison and other activists simply urged voters to get informed and get to the polls.

“If you know what you’re talking about, it makes it easier to then hold people’s feet to the fire,” she said.

Faison plans to keep doing just that. While she hopes the power of the Black vote brought to bear on Biden’s win makes the Democratic party take the demands of the African American community seriously, she assumes her activist work is far from over.

“Asking for equity is not a radical position,” Faison said. “The fight for Black liberation needs to keep going.”



Young voters helped propel Biden to victory. Now they're pushing for a more progressive Democratic Party
Hannah Miao CNBC

© Provided by CNBC Members of the Georgia Tech Women's basketball team hold voting signs outside of McCamish Pavillion which serves as a polling place on Election Day in Atlanta, Ga., on Tuesday, November 3, 2020.

Young voters turned out in high numbers to help deliver Joe Biden the presidency.

Youth organizers are pushing the Democratic Party to embrace a more progressive platform.
The movement comes as tension grows between the Democratic Party's moderate and liberal factions.

President-elect Joe Biden was not Sam Weinberg's first or even second choice for the White House. Like many young progressives, the 19-year-old Illinois native had supported Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren during the Democratic primaries.


But in April, when Biden became the last man standing in the Democratic primary, Weinberg decided to back the centrist candidate.

Fearing his peers might not follow suit, he created "Settle for Biden," an Instagram account using what he describes as "sardonic millennial and Gen Z humor" to convince young people to, well, settle for Biden.

With catchphrases such as "Because a C+ is better than an F," the campaign focused on mobilizing young people to vote President Donald Trump out of office. After more than 290,000 followers and millions of likes, comments and shares on the account, Settle for Biden has become an advocacy group and its name has proven to be an effective rallying cry for young voters.

Other progressive groups have also been organizing young people for political action, including the climate-focused Sunrise Movement, anti-gun violence group March for Our Lives, immigrant advocacy group United We Dream and other movements.

Their efforts may have had an impact on Biden's victory. Turnout among voting-eligible Americans ages 18-29 increased significantly from 2016 to 2020 and a majority of them supported Biden, according to preliminary analysis from Tufts University.

Now, youth organizers are pushing the Democratic Party to embrace a more progressive platform.

"Progressive voters are the future of this country, progressive policies are the future of politics, and we are going to keep fighting to make sure that Biden's administration is as progressive as possible," Weinberg said.
Young voters' electoral impact

Voters ages 18-29, particularly young people of color, supported Biden at a greater rate than any other age group, NBC News exit polls show. Between 73% and 87% of Latino, Asian and Black youth supported Biden, compared with 51% of White youth, according to data from the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement, or CIRCLE, at Tufts University.

In key swing states such as Arizona, Michigan and Pennsylvania, where NBC News has projected a Biden win, preliminary data shows young people's support helped push Biden over the margin of victory. Biden made gains in Michigan and Pennsylvania counties with large college student populations.

© Provided by CNBC

Young Black voters played a crucial role in flipping Georgia, a traditionally Republican stronghold, where Biden currently holds a narrow lead. Voters ages 18-29 made up 21% of the state's voter share — 5% higher than the youth voter share nationwide. About 90% of young Black voters supported Biden, compared with 34% of White youth and 57% of all youth voters in Georgia. 

"We won this election for Joe Biden," said Nikayla Jefferson, a 24-year-old organizer for the Sunrise Movement. "We're not going to let that go. He definitely owes his administration to us."

The Biden campaign did not immediately respond to CNBC's request for comment.
A divided party

In April, a coalition of progressive youth groups including the Sunrise Movement, the March for Our Lives Action Fund, United We Dream Action and Justice Democrats penned a letter to Biden asking him to earn the support of young people. The coalition urged Biden to support policies such as "Medicare for All," canceling student debt, a wealth tax and the Green New Deal commitment to clean energy.

"We need you to champion the bold ideas that have galvanized our generation and given us hope in the political process," the letter read.

On Wednesday, the Sunrise Movement and Justice Democrats released a list of recommendations for Biden's Cabinet, including Warren as Treasury secretary and Sanders as labor secretary.

The move comes as tension grows between the Democratic Party's moderate and liberal factions. As Democrats' House majority is projected to shrink following the 2020 election, centrist Democrats have blamed progressive policies for costing the party seats, including "Medicare for All" and the Green New Deal.

Meanwhile, progressive Democrats have criticized moderate Democrats for catering more to center-right voters than those who consistently vote blue. Prominent figures such as Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Rashida Tlaib are urging the party to "


My residents walked by blighted homes, closed schools and breathed in polluted air, to vote for President-elect @JoeBiden & VP-elect @KamalaHarris. They don't deserve to be silenced. We must honor our communities that showed up. #EmbracetheBase
Laura Barrón-López
@lbarronlopez
NEW: Progressives strikes back at centrist Dems Rep. Tlaib choked up in interview as she said people in her district walked past blighted homes to vote for Biden/Harris. “I can’t believe that people are asking them to be quiet.” More w/@hollyotterbein politi.co/2IlhBSW



"It's important to not ignore who supports you the most," said Mary-Pat Hector, a 22-year-old youth voting advocate based in Atlanta. "Young people are now officially a huge part of their base, so it's important to talk to them."

Hector points to Black female leaders who have rallied youth voters in Georgia for years, including Tamieka Atkins, Helen Butler, Nse Ufot, Deborah Scott and 2018 Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams.

"We really need to be thinking about how to be in conversation with young people, not just in the two to three months before an election like we're cramming for a test," said Abby Kiesa, deputy director of CIRCLE.

"If we don't have politicians in there that seem like they care about young people, then we're not going to want to get involved," said 20-year-old Emily Zanieski, co-leader of Students for Ossoff, a youth-led initiative to elect Georgia Democratic Senate candidate Jon Ossoff.
'We are the future of the party'

For many young people, Biden's campaign promise of a return to "normalcy" is not enough.

"This sense of uncertainty about the future is something we've been feeling for a long time, and that comes down to issues such as health care, education affordability and climate change," said Royce Mann, 19, legislative director for March for Our Lives' Georgia chapter.

"The party needs to start listening to its progressive wing and start understanding that a progressive platform aligns with folks who I don't think a centrist could ever reach," said Isabella Guinigundo, an 18-year-old organizer with Ohio Progressive Asian Women's Leadership. "Progressive policies are good policies for anyone interested in good paying jobs and a future that is for all of us."

The Democratic Party's first test? Biden's Cabinet appointees.

In addition to the Sunrise Movement and Justice Democrats, Settle for Biden has also released a slate of recommendations for top government posts. With the fate of the Senate still unknown, youth organizers are urging Biden to use his executive powers in key areas such as the Covid-19 pandemic, climate change and the economy.

"The work starts now. We have to hold these people accountable to support the policies that we want to see happen in the future," said Marcia Lacopo, 21, a North Carolina-based organizer with progressive youth voting initiative NextGen America.

After propelling Biden to the White House, young progressives expect the president-elect to deliver on the mandate they've given him.

"We are the future of the party," Sunrise Movement's Jefferson said. "We've made it very clear that the party is changing and either they come with us or we kick them out of office."


Tamara Ross waits in line on the first day of early voting for the general election at the C.T. Martin Natatorium and Recreation Center on Oct. 12, 2020 in Atlanta, Ga.. Early voting in Georgia runs from Oct.12 to Oct. 30.