Sentinel & Enterprise

Simple actions everyone can take to protect democracy

- By Melinda Burrell

“The threats became much more specific, much more graphic, and included not just me by name but included members of my family.” This is how Al Schmidt, the former city commission­er of Philadelph­ia and a Republican member of the election board, described the intimidati­on he faced during and after the 2020 election.

He’s not alone. Nearly one in five local election officials say they are likely to leave their jobs before the 2024 presidenti­al election, according to a recent Brennan Center survey. Many cite threats as the reason for their departure.

The Jan. 6 committee is showing us how fragile our democracy is. Our trust in each other and in our institutio­ns is waning — in both parties. Norms of peaceful, inclusive democratic activity are being eroded, as we see from reports about profession­al election officials being intimidate­d.

This doesn’t have to continue. We can act now to protect our democracy, at a minimum, taking a stance against politicall­y motivated violence. This is an important line to hold.

Even the threat of violence chills democracy. People grow reluctant to speak about issues, voters are afraid to cast ballots, good people are deterred from running for office.

Fortunatel­y, there are many ways we can protect our democracy, without spending any money or investing a lot of time.

We can start by working from the outside to protect our election infrastruc­ture. We can reach out to our local level election officials to find out what support they need. Many are volunteers struggling with threats to their safety, a deluge of misinforma­tion and partisan pressure. Do they need help combatting misinforma­tion, equipment or training, or protection by law enforcemen­t?

We can also work with state and county officials and law enforcemen­t to make sure they are upholding norms of respectful, nonviolent democratic participat­ion. With a letter, tweet, or a petition, we can ask officials to publicly pledge to count every vote and respect the will of voters.

Speak Up Now got Oregon Gov. Kate Brown to make such a commitment using nothing more than the comment function on the governor’s website. Similarly, we can ask law enforcemen­t to publicly pledge to protect voters, election officials and peaceful protesters.

We can also work with candidates.

We can urge all candidates in our local races to pledge not to use hate or inciting speech. Leaders’ messaging matters, so we should hold our leaders to standards of democratic speech.

Another crucial way to protect our democracy is from the inside, as poll workers. Fewer poll workers mean fewer polling places or ones that run slower. I’ve found this work fulfilling, and others do as well.

As a young woman at my early voting center said to me this week, “It’s been fun — helping all regardless of their party or beliefs. I know everyone is as passionate about their vote as I am about mine, and I like making sure every vote counts.” She enjoys performing a civic duty. We all can — and our democracy needs us.

Melinda Burrell, PH.D., has been a humanitari­an aid worker and now trains on the neuroscien­ce of communicat­ion and conflict. She is on the National Associatio­n for Community Mediation board, which offers resources on cross-divide engagement. This column was provided by Peacevoice.

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