The Guardian (USA)

Stacey Abrams: 'This is not a fight that’s going to be won in a single election'

- Adrian Horton

The two months between Labor Day and the US election in November are crunch time for Stacey Abrams. Two years ago, during the 2018 midterms, the Democratic candidate for governor of Georgia pressed to register and rally voters amid disturbing revelation­s about the fairness of the election. Two weeks before election day, an investigat­ion found that the state of Georgia had improperly purged 340,000 people from voter registrati­on rolls without notice; the man in charge of running a fair election, secretary of state Brian Kemp, had previously blocked 53,000 people – 80% of them black – from registerin­g to vote due to minor discrepanc­ies in their state records.

Kemp, a Republican and outspoken Trump loyalist, was also running against Abrams, who would have become the nation’s first black female governor, had she not lost by a razorthin margin of about 55,000 votes.

Abrams never conceded the race due to the issues of voter suppressio­n and a number of civil rights lawsuits still tied up in court. And now, as the clock closes in once again on a monumental, bitterly contested election, Abrams is focused on the democratic bedrock which arguably cost her the governorsh­ip, and whose shakiness could fundamenta­lly undermine American government. In 2018, “so much attention was being paid to my campaign and my election that I think it eclipsed the larger issue,” she told the Guardian, “which is that voter suppressio­n is happening across this country and regardless of who the target may be, the effect is that you break the machinery of democracy for everyone.”

In 2019, Abrams launched Fair Fight, a grassroots organizati­on to expose voter suppressio­n and advocate for free and fair elections. As explained by All In: The Fight For Democracy, an Amazon Prime documentar­y on the long arc of voting rights and suppressio­n in the US, attempts to curtail the most institutio­nal form of American democracy have proliferat­ed in the last 20 years. Since the election of Barack Obama in 2008 and the 2013 supreme court ruling which defanged the 1965 Voting Rights Act, “voter suppressio­n has taken on a much more aggressive and malevolent turn that we haven’t really seen since Jim Crow,” Abrams said.

All In, directed by Lisa Cortés and Liz Garbus, splices Abrams’s 2018 campaign and her 2020 Fair Fight movement with a history lesson on America’s democratic promise long unfulfille­d, tracing enfranchis­ement from its limit to white male property owners at the nation’s outset through Reconstruc­tion, a brief window of black enfranchis­ement in which numerous black men were elected to Congress and state government­s. But by the turn of the 20th century, southern states turned to the so-called “Mississipp­i Plan” to systematic­ally deny minorities the right to vote by using the societal conditions imposed on African Americans, such as poverty and low literacy rates, as the preconditi­ons for voting. Hence, poll taxes. Literacy tests rigged for failure. The permanent barring of felons, which disenfranc­hised African Americans targeted by draconian penal codes for everyday behavior, such as

loitering in a street. Voter intimidati­on, harassment and violence. Jim Crow legislatio­n ravaged the swift gains of Reconstruc­tion and paralyzed the black electorate for nearly a century; by the 1950s, only 3% of age-eligible black people in the south were registered to vote.

Contempora­ry history is a “new reiteratio­n of a long continuum”, Cortés told the Guardian. “When you look at the history of voting rights and voter suppressio­n, you see it’s inherent in the DNA of our country.” In the past, it was “billy clubs and hoses; now it’s strict voter ID laws and purges and the intentiona­l poll closures. They’re a part of the same power playbook.”

Abrams’s mission with All In is to reveal the same power playbook at work now in seemingly neutral laws made to look reasonable. Measures such as voter ID laws and mass clearings of voter rolls “sound intentiona­lly benign to lull us into ignoring them”, she said. “But let’s be clear: we have voter ID laws from the inception of our country. You always had to say who you are and demonstrat­e it to cast a ballot. What’s different is how restrictiv­e and how suppressiv­e the type of ID can be.”

In the 2016 election, for example, 33 states had some form of voter identifica­tion measure, ostensibly to combat voter fraud but in practice targeting minority groups; black voter turnout plunged seven percentage points. North Dakota imposed a law requiring a street address to vote, which imperiled the rights of Native Americans living on reservatio­ns, who often do not have a fixed government-recognized address. In Texas, voter ID laws accepted a handgun license, but not the student ID for public universiti­es often issued to young voters.

The insidious trajectory of voter suppressio­n – how it morphs to meet the moment, how defenders deny charges of intentiona­l racism based on vague language – is something Abrams, 46, knows well. Raised in Gulfport, Mississipp­i, Abrams was “steeped in not just the history of what voter suppressio­n is, but I was raised to believe that when you see a problem, your job is to solve it”. Her parents, Methodist ministers, took her to the polls as a child and instilled the importance of the Voting Rights Act. Their legacy and lessons “equipped me for this moment”, she said. “I may not have become governor, but that does not absolve me of the responsibi­lity to ensure that the voices of Americans get heard. I’m not entitled to history. And we aren’t entitled to our choice of winning at the ballot box. What we are entitled to is being heard.”

She’s excited about the partnershi­p with Amazon Prime, she said, because she believes in “meeting people where they are. I also believe in telling them the truth about what they face.” That truth is that suppressio­n tactics are on the rise, that some of the greatest enfranchis­ement progress of the civil rights era is at risk of being lost, if not lost already, a struggle further exacerbate­d by the coronaviru­s pandemic. Case in point: the disastrous primary elections in Wisconsin and Georgia this spring, in which voters waited upwards of five hours at drasticall­y restricted poll locations, especially in predominan­tly African American neighborho­ods. It’s enough to make one despair, but All In “tries to combat the hopelessne­ss by showing the progress”, said Abrams. “You can only make progress if you know where you are and where you’ve been.”

The week we spoke, police in Kenosha, Wisconsin, shot Jacob Blake, a black man, in the back as he tried to climb into his car. The current president undermined the post office and railed against non-existent, disproven voter fraud. Faith in mail-in voting has plunged. Given the mess of 2020, and the protracted, cyclical, uphill fight for voting rights, how does one hold on to hope? “This is not a fight that’s going to be won in a single election or even a single decade,” Abrams responded. “This has been a perennial challenge from the inception of our nation. My hope is drawn from the fact that we haven’t given in yet. After 240 years, I would be forgiven for just saying, never mind. But we are celebratin­g in this year the 150th anniversar­y of black men getting the right to vote through the 15th amendment, the 100th anniversar­y of women’s suffrage, where white women got the right to vote. As a black woman, I may not have benefited immediatel­y from either, but I am the product of the legacy of both. That is hope.”

Abrams derives hope, too, from the nationwide marches for Black Lives Matter this summer in response to the police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. “There’s connective tissue between the protests we see in the streets and the action that has to be taken at the ballot box,” she said.

“In years past, the shooting of Jacob Blake would’ve been chalked up to one more shooting, and there would’ve been a sense of hopelessne­ss – there’s no point in responding, there’s no point in protest,” she added. “What we see in protest is an activation of humanity that says that we deserve more. We deserve justice, we deserve answers.

“As unsettling and discomfiti­ng as they may be, there is hope in the marginaliz­ed demanding to be seen, especially in an election.”

After the 2018 election and a bid for Biden’s vice-presidenti­al nomination that ultimately went to Kamala Harris, Abrams remains mum on another run for political office. Looking forward, she’s focused on the fight to vote, ensuring an accurate 2020 census and battling the related scourge of gerrymande­red representa­tive districts. “I’m not saying I’m not running again,” she said, “but my focus now is to make sure that we have a democracy that I can run in.”

All In: The Fight for Democracy is now showing at cinemas in the US and will be available on Amazon from 18 September

 ??  ?? Stacey Abrams: ‘I may not have become governor, but that does not absolve me of the responsibi­lity to ensure that the voices of Americans get heard.’ Photograph: Michael A
Stacey Abrams: ‘I may not have become governor, but that does not absolve me of the responsibi­lity to ensure that the voices of Americans get heard.’ Photograph: Michael A
 ??  ?? Photograph: Courtesy of Amazon Studios
Photograph: Courtesy of Amazon Studios

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