USA TODAY US Edition

Ogwumike dishes on election work

- Chris Bumbaca

On Nov. 7, Barack Obama tweeted congratula­tions to President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris for their victory in the election.

Obama’s last tweet before that? A retweet of Chiney Ogwumike from Election Day, when the WNBA player and ESPN radio host – along with sisters Nneka, her teammate on the Los Angeles Sparks, and Olivia – worked as an election clerk in her hometown of Houston.

“Thank you Chiney, Nneka, and all of the athletes who are using their platforms and helping people vote in this election,” the 44th president tweeted on Nov. 3.

Ogwumike merely wanted to play a small role in a process she admires. Instead, her recognitio­n went viral.

“This is just a gut instinct for me, to go home and try to help,” she told USA TODAY Sports a week after Election Day. “For it to be recognized by President Barack Obama, that was so crazy.”

Truth is, Ogwumike missed the initial flood of texts, direct messages and mentions in the aftermath of Obama pressing send. Running on four hours of sleep, it’d been a frenetic 24 hours for the 28-year-old, the final stretch in a journey that began over the summer.

Organizers of More Than A Vote – the LeBron James-led group of athletes and celebritie­s aimed at combating voter suppressio­n while mobilizing voters – identified Ogwumike as someone who needed to be brought in at the ground level. More Than A Vote executive director Addisu Demissie told USA TODAY Sports she is a “founding member to say the least, and not just sort of putting her name of paper, but actually doing stuff for the whole six months.”

Ogwumike narrated ads for the organizati­on and didn’t stop there.

“I think she’s the embodiment of ‘Don’t just talk about it, be about it,’ ” Demissie said.

Ogwumike’s activism is the next natural step of a mass athlete movement that started several years ago and continued when leaders across all sports stepped up.

“(Voting) is the front door to change,” Demissie said. “It’s not the whole thing. We’re walking through the front door with what we did this year, but there’s more to come.”

Through her involvemen­t with More Than A Vote and during surrogate media appearance­s on CNN and MSNBC, Ogwumike vocalized the need for the younger generation to take up the mantle from the elderly, who usually serve as the bulk of poll workers, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I was like, ‘ Why don’t I just do this?’ ” Ogwumike recalled. “If I’m asking people to do it and (I’m) using my voice in this way, why don’t I actually try and become a poll worker myself ? I’m young, I’m capable.”

A native of Cypress, Texas, Ogwumike and her sisters decided to work at the Toyota Center, home of the Houston Rockets and one of several arenas and stadiums opened across the country to boost turnout and provide a space for socially distanced, in-person voting. The voting drop box controvers­y in Harris County fueled Ogwumike’s desire to serve her hometown.

“No matter what side of the (political) spectrum you’re on, voting matters,” she said.

So after her ESPN afternoon radio show with Mike Golic Jr. on Nov. 2, Ogwumike hopped on a flight that got her into Houston around midnight. A 5 a.m. wake-up call followed, and the three Ogwumike sisters arrived at the Toyota Center ready to work by 6.

As an election worker, Ogwumike commanded one of approximat­ely 50 drive-thru voting stations in the arena’s parking lot, she said. Among her duties: checking driver’s licenses, confirming residencie­s, applying PPE when appropriat­e and handing voters the mobile voting machines. The Stanford-educated Ogwumike speaks proficient Spanish and helped voters in her second language. A proud family moment occurred when Olivia, an MBA student at Rice, administer­ed Ogwumike’s vote while Nneka, president of the WNBA Players’ Associatio­n, looked on.

The voters who stood out most to Chiney included the person who asked “I’m DACA, I can vote, right?” and the Black woman who brought her two children to the polls – a son voting for the first time and an inquisitiv­e younger daughter who beamed when handed an “I Voted” sticker.

Chiney assisted Biden supporters and Donald Trump supporters. She watched the Democratic election official and Republican official work in unison throughout the day.

“They’re cool. They’re friends. They coexist,” Ogwumike said. “That’s the Houston that I know, that’s the Harris County that I know. We cannot agree on everything but still understand the value in what we’re doing.”

By the time their shift ended at 3, the Ogwumike clan’s smiles spanned their faces, although they’re not visible behind the masks Chiney and Nneka wore in the photo Obama eventually shared.

Ogwumike had congregate­d with relatives and her parents at an uncle’s house for an election night gathering when her phone began buzzing more than normal.

“I thought, ‘This has to be a spam account,’ ” she said of Obama’s tweet. “And it wasn’t. The funny thing was, I hadn’t even checked my texts that day.”

Ogwumike didn’t wake up on Election Day seeking that level of attention. She is someone who prides herself on grinding in the darkness.

Admitting the borderline corniness of the simile, Ogwumike compared her Election Day journey to holding the follow-through on a jump shot.

“We don’t have to wait to help create change to help one another, to engage,” she said. “We all can make a difference in our own ways.

“Having a voice matters. Representa­tion matters. It’s not something that you stop there. What are you going to do with it?”

 ?? COURTESY OF CHINEY OGWUMIKE ?? Chiney Ogwumike, left and her sister Nneka after the Sparks’ players served as poll workers on Election Day in Houston.
COURTESY OF CHINEY OGWUMIKE Chiney Ogwumike, left and her sister Nneka after the Sparks’ players served as poll workers on Election Day in Houston.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States