General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: How about a Voters' Revolution? [View all]MineralMan
(151,653 posts)voters. In order for the Voters' Revolution to occur, we need those activists and organizers who are calling for change to go out and organize the disenfranchised and discouraged to take their place in line at the polling place. We need to bring them to the caucuses and conventions and empower them to choose candidates who have their interests as their highers priority.
In Minnesota, this year, a large group of Somali-Americans in Minneapolis did just that. They organized and came to the precinct caucus meeting in their neighborhood and insisted on being part of the process of selecting candidates. That unfamiliar group threw the entire caucus into disorder and it had to be rescheduled and held in a larger facility. Change occurred because the disenfranchised insisted on their franchise.
Where caucuses are not the system, the same thing needs to happen at meetings of the Democratic Party organization. People must show up and demand to be heard. When they do, they will be heard. Numbers make the difference.
A Voters' Revolution is possible, but it won't happen if people don't want it to happen or don't believe it can happen.