General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: How about a Voters' Revolution? [View all]MineralMan
(151,941 posts)bottom up. Replacing those top dogs must begin from the local organizations, and those are completely dependent on local participation. In Minneapolis, for example, where precinct caucuses are typically poorly-attended, one precinct was completely taken over by a large group of Somali-Americans, who came and insisted on representation. The caucus had to be rescheduled and held in a larger venue.
In the precinct caucus in my St. Paul precinct, three people showed up. At the state Senate district convention, only 75 delegates were there. Guess what? Those 75 delegates elected the entire slate of District leadership and state convention delegates. My precinct alone had the ability to send 17 delegates to the district convention. We could only choose three, because those were the only ones who showed up.
It grows from the bottom. Show up at the bottom and be counted. Be a delegate. Vote for the leadership you want. Or, don't. If you don't you'll have the leadership you get.
Activism means being active.