Source: The New Republic
On Friday morning, after a full night spent counting and tabulating mail-in ballots, votes from Philadelphia may have delivered the final blow kicking President Trump out of the White House. Thursday, Trump attempted preemptively to cast doubt on the result. āTheyāre trying to steal an election, theyāre trying to rig an election,ā the deflated president told a White House briefing room, calling Detroit and Philadelphia ātwo of the most corrupt political places.ā
For the last week, Philadelphia has been a hub of nationwide election-defense work rallying behind a simple message: Count All the Votes. Regular protests of hundreds of union members, community organizing groups, and socialistsāincluding outside the Philadelphia Convention Center, where votes are still being talliedāhave channeled the manic energy thatās flowed out of Tuesdayās election into traditional marches and marathon dance parties alike.Ā People in mailbox costumesĀ dancing to Mary J. Blige, puppet displays, and protesting Elmos have presented themselves as a populist answer to a week of attempted coups from the White House and theĀ wannabe brownshirt supporters who have surroundedĀ vote counters in top battleground statesĀ to chant either āStop the count!ā or āCount the votes!ā depending on whether Trump is ahead. Early this morning, local news in Philadelphia received reports of a Hummer that had driven up from Virginia in anĀ alleged plotĀ to attack the Convention Center. Were it not for rolling demonstrations this week, itās possible that scenes in Pennsylvania could have been far uglierāand the election results less certain.
The left-led demonstrations to protect both the election and a decidedly centrist candidate build on decades of Philadelphia organizingāmuch of it responding, in turn, to Republican policies suppressing Black voters. Just weeks ago, racial justice and community groups came together to support protests against the police killing of Walter Wallace, led by Wallaceās family and community in West Philadelphia. The demonstrations around the presidential election follow on the heels of recent electoral successes for left-wing elected officials, both in Philadelphia and across the state, involving massive canvassing and get-out-the-voteĀ efforts to elect underdog candidates. A year ago, organizer Kendra Brooks became the first Working Families candidate elected to the city council, where she joined councilwoman Helen Gym, who has deep roots in Philly organizing spaces. Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasnerāelected in 2017āwas familiar to the activists he defended when they were arrested during Occupy demonstrations. Nikil Saval and Rick Krajewski were each elected to the state legislature, where theyāll join fellow democratic socialists Summer Lee, Elizabeth Fiedlner, and Sara Innamorato, who were all reelected to second terms on Tuesday.
āGroups in Philadelphia have been embarking on projects around relationship and movement building for many, many years now, and it feels like this moment is really a testament to how much work people have done in terms of seeing each otherās struggles as connected,ā said Arielle Klagsbrun, who coordinates the Philadelphia Action Council, which has served as the organizational hub for this weekās activities. āThe system that murdered Walter Wallace two weeks ago is the same system that is looking to disenfranchise Black and Brown voters across Pennsylvania.ā
The efforts in Philadelphia connect to similar ones across the state and nation on various fronts. Movements helmed largely by Black women in several battleground statesāincluding Stacey Abrams and the New Georgia Projectāhave worked to rebuff right-wing voter suppression efforts for years and protect mail-in and in-person votes that proved decisive in Bidenās likely victory.
Looking to ensure all those votes would be counted in the long lead-up to Election Day, local organizers and a statewide coalition, Pennsylvania Stands Up, have been in touch with a number of national election defense outfits comprised of the Working Families Party; the Sunrise Movement; the National Domestic Workers Alliance; and national unions, including SEIU as well as Indivisible, among many other groups that have been providing support to protests around the country. On Wednesday, one such outlet called Protect the Resultsāa massive coalition of 165 organizationsāannounced it would ānot be activating the entire national mobilization networkā for demonstrations that had been planned in advance but remained āready to activate if necessary.ā
Organizers in Pennsylvania and elsewhere decided not to heed the stand-down suggestion. āThere was communication, but Pennsylvania groups are not taking direction from the national groups,ā said Becca Rast, Bernie Sandersās former national field director who helped to organize count-the-vote actions in her hometown of Lancaster. Other groups, including the Sunrise Movement and We the People, in Michigan, among others, moved ahead with protests, too. Many were eager not to repeat what had happened with the calamitousĀ Florida recount in 2000, when Al Goreās campaign discouraged protests while the so-called Brooks Brothers rioters and the national GOP moved aggressively to claim the disputed election.
This time around, āthereās just a lot more of a mixed message from the right, and they donāt have consistency in what theyāre asking for, which undermines the whole thing,ā Rast told me. āProgressives are clear: Count every vote, and we want to see it happen as quickly as possible.ā Months of saber-rattling from Trump also led many local officials to expect a fight.
āWeāre under no belief that Trump is going to just concede easily,ā Klagsbrun said when we spoke Thursday afternoon. āThat would be anathema to what weāve seen. Whether the vote results get announced for Pennsylvania today, tomorrow, or Saturday, weāre going to continue to mobilize.āShe also reiterated a sentiment voiced by several of the groups engaged in defending the election results: that the ties strengthened and built to count the votes will be used to hold a Biden administration to account. āWeāre ready to pressure the hell out of Biden,ā Rast said. āA lot has changed since Obama was elected in 2008 and folks werenāt ready to be on the offense. People arenāt going to take a big sigh and stop turning out.ā
Garrett Blad, a spokesperson for the Sunrise Movementāthe youth climate advocacy group whoseĀ members mobilized for election-defense efforts in Pennsylvania, Arizona, North Carolina, and Michiganāechoed that. āSunrise is committed to strengthening and making sure that the progressive block is making demands and using their numbers to actually transform legislation in the House. This is not a moment to pass incremental change, no matter what the Senate looks like,ā he told me, addressing concerns aired midweek that, even with a Biden win, Senate results would preclude ambitious climate legislation.
In the past few days, some Democrats have blamed the left wing of the party for down-ticket losses. That doesnāt seem to have stopped members of that wing from taking to the streets to defend Joe Bidenās chances. Itās a fight these organizers connect back to their local battles and core principles. āOur movement is broader than just fighting Trump. Itās based on real policy around bringing racial and economic justice to our city,ā Klagsbrun said of Philadelphia. āItās not going to go away just because we defeated a fascist.ā
Kate Aronoff is a staff writer atĀ The New Republic.Ā @KateAronoff
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