Day 3: Voter Justice & Swing States

Objectives

  • Assess potential to collectively engage in 1-3 swing states together

  • Develop an understanding of Voting Rights Act, voter turnout, and voter demographics in the US

  • Gain insight and inspiration from our guest speakers (Port Commissioner Sam Cho in the morning, and recording of James Carville in the evening).

  • Review what swing states are

  • Choose a campaign and/or organization to volunteer with

  • Continue to build a community of learning and engagement

In Preparation for Today...

0) Be sure you have a solid grasp of the three branches of government. In your journal, respond to these three questions:

  • What is the US Senate? Who does it represent?

  • What is the US House of Representatives? Who does it represent?

  • What challenges, drawbacks, or injustices of this system do you see?

1) What positions do your elected officials have on the issues you care most about? How have they engaged in the issues you care about?

  • What issues do you care deeply about (choose 1-2)? Why do you care about them?

  • Choose 1-3 of your elected officials, research their positions on these issues, and write them a letter (or email, Tweet, etc.) or call them, either thanking them or asking them to shift their position.

  • Add a sticky note this JamBoard with:

    • The name and title of the elected official you contacted

    • The issue you communicated with them about

    • Your first name and last initial

2) What are swing states? What swing states are in play this year? Explore at least one website that examines swing states.

3) Develop questions for our guest speaker on Tuesday, July 7: Port Commissioner Sam Cho. Please read his bio and/or Google him, and develop 3 questions you’d like to ask him. Write these in your journal and add ONE to a sticky note in the JamBoard (include your name).

4) Watch Selma: Bridge to the Ballot. Questions to reflect on (in your journal):

  • What struck you in watching this film?

  • What role did young people, and particularly high school students play in the fight for voting rights for African Americans?

  • How does the movement for the right to vote relate to what we’re experiencing today? What parallels do you see between the movie and today?

Today's Session

PPT for this session are here.

JamBoards for this session. Questions for Seattle Port Commissioner Sam Cho.

Reflection (write in journal after or during session)

  • Guest Speaker Name: Date:

  • What are 1-3 things that you learned, or that struck you, from our time with the guest speaker today?

  • What follow up questions do you have for the guest speaker? Or, what questions arose from your time with the guest speaker?

  • What campaign or organization would you like to volunteer with? Why are you drawn to it in particular?

To Do at Home (before next session)

0) [If you haven't already] Reflect (write in journal)

  • What campaign or organization would you like to volunteer with? Why are you drawn to it in particular?

  • Guest Speaker Name: James Carville (recording available on Canvas)

  • What are 1-3 things that you learned, or that struck you, from our time with the guest speaker today?

  • What follow up questions do you have for the guest speaker? Or, what questions arose from your time with the guest speaker?

1) Listen to The Economist Podcast, “Where does power lie in America?” interview with Stacey Abrams (October 2019) OR watchSuppressed: The Fight to Vote,” (2019).

2) Decide what campaign or organization you’d like to volunteer with--use the "Choosing a Campaign..." page to help guide your thinking.

3) Develop questions for our guest speaker on Thursday, July 9: Kristine Reeves, who is running of US Congress in WA 10th district. Please read Kristine's bio and/or Google her, and develop 3 questions you’d like to ask her. Write these in your journal and add ONE to a sticky note in the JamBoard (include your name).

4) Start volunteering + logging your hours in your journal. If you haven’t heard back from the campaign or organization yet, that is ok--be patient. In the meantime, spend your time researching the states/candidates/organizations you’re planning to work with.

5) Come prepared to discuss in small groups your experiences. (It may be the process of choosing a campaign or organization to volunteer with and what you're nervous about or what questions you have. Or, it may be that you’ve been phone banking all week long.)

6) Watch "Gerrymandering Explained."