The Guardian (USA)

Next stop for Democratic ‘uncommitte­d’ vote campaign for Gaza: Washington

- Rachel Leingang

The movement among Democrats to cast a Gaza protest vote against President Joe Biden in the primary election moves to Washington state on Tuesday.

Organizers with Vote Uncommitte­d WA have been working for two weeks to ramp up outreach to voters via phone, text, online and in-person connection­s to explain how they can use their primary ballots to check “uncommitte­d delegates” to send a message to Biden in support of a permanent ceasefire.

They were inspired first by the turnout for the uncommitte­d vote in Michigan, which received more than 100,000 votes, and have learned from organizers there how to get the word out quickly.

A “multiracia­l, multifaith, anti-war coalition” came together to push uncommitte­d in Washington, said Rami Al-Kabra, a city council member in Bothell, Washington, who is helping to organize the Washington uncommitte­d vote. It got a boost from two major unions’ local chapters: the state’s largest, the United Food and Commercial Workers, and the American Federation of Teachers.

The uncommitte­d push saw big turnout in Minnesota as well, where organizers had one week to convince voters to use their vote to call for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza. Nearly 46,000 Minnesota Democrats voted uncommitte­d, making up 19% of ballots cast and winning 11 delegates to the Democratic convention.

In Hawaii on 6 March, uncommitte­d snagged 29% of the nearly 1,600 Democratic primary votes cast, the highest percentage so far, getting seven delegates. Also on Tuesday, a similar effort in Georgia is encouragin­g voters to leave their ballots blank as a protest over Gaza since the state doesn’t have an uncommitte­d option. The uncommitte­d movement is also underway in Wisconsin, another swing state, which votes on 2 April. And Biden announced a plan in his State of the Union speech to build a temporary dock to deliver aid to Gaza.

After the Michigan vote, vice-president Kamala Harris announced support for a temporary, six-week ceasefire, which uncommitte­d organizers say doesn’t go far enough but is a sign the administra­tion is paying attention to their protest votes.

Washington’s effort doesn’t have a set number of votes it’s hoping to get for uncommitte­d, but Al-Kabra said the movement has a lot of momentum in the state and hopes to win some delegates. The threshold for delegates is winning 15% in any given congressio­nal district.

Beyond the numbers, though, the hope is to get Biden’s attention at the ballot box to get him to issue a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.

“I know personally of people who threw away their ballots as soon as they got them, especially from the Arab community, because we feel completely disenfranc­hised by the Biden administra­tion,” Al-Kabra said.

The option to vote uncommitte­d gave a “glimmer of hope”, and Al-Kabra said he also knew of people who re-ordered ballots after tossing them to vote uncommitte­d.

Most Washington voters cast ballots by mail, after they had been sent out in late February. The first release of results in the state typically skews more conservati­ve than the electorate as a whole, then moves farther to the left over time as more results from later mail returns and same-day voting comes in.

 ?? ?? A volunteer with the Listen to Michigan campaign in Dearborn, Michigan, on 27 February 2024. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
A volunteer with the Listen to Michigan campaign in Dearborn, Michigan, on 27 February 2024. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States