INDIVISIBLE Lambertville NJ / New Hope PA

Author: Indivisible Lambertville / New Hope

  • Vote 2020 FAQ for Hunterdon County, NJ Voters

    Vote 2020 FAQ for Hunterdon County, NJ Voters

    The Hunterdon County Clerk’s Office has put together a comprehensive FAQ about voting in the 2020 election based on the numerous questions the office has received. While some information is still fluid, the document offers links where information will be updated as it becomes available. 

    The Hunterdon Vote 2020 website will also provide information on county, municipal and school board candidates, the three NJ ballot questions, and more. 

    Please read and be informed! There are a lot of people asking questions about this unusual election year, and it’s important not to add to the confusion with incorrect information.  

     

  • ILNH FYI

    ILNH FYI

    Stamp Out Trump with Bucks Dems: The Bucks County Democratic Committee is trying to raise $5000 by September 15 for its Mail-in Ballot Fund with its “Stamp Out Trump” Campaign. Funds will be used to support direct outreach and marketing to Bucks County Democrats with a focus on harder-to-reach populations to increase mail-in ballot requests AND returns. The organization has also created a toolkit with graphics, social media posts and copy for emails. 

    Malinowski, Kean to square off in Sept. 26 Candidates Forum

    Mark your calendars to watch U.S. Rep. Tom Malinowski, D-7, and his Republican challenger, state Sen. Thomas Kean Jr., square off on issues when the League of Women Voters hosts a virtual 7th Congressional debate on September 26 at 4pm.  

  • From the Editor: I Really Don’t Care. Do You?

     Contributed by Deb Kline.

    Good news! 

    We are under three months from the November 3 election, and pollsters, pundits and prognosticators are saying Joe Biden will be the winner of the 2020 Presidential Election. 

    I really don’t care. 

    I don’t care what the predictions are – even those that come from ‘experts’ who have a 100 percent accurate track record of predicting the outcome since we began electing presidents. 

    I’m not being a Debbie Downer – despite the unfortunate shared name. What I’m also not being is complacent. Not for one moment will I think that Joe has it in the bag, or that the wider percentage of eligible voters have ‘seen the light’ despite their party affiliation and general laziness or other excuses for not voting. 

    The stakes are just too high in this election and the opposition will stop at NOTHING to ensure that the mentally and physically disabled occupant of the White House is re-elected. 

    I get it. You’re already exhausted by the constant onslaught of news about the corruption, the self-dealing, the dirty, underhanded tricks, the lack of compassion for (fill in the blank here: COVID victims and families, children in cages, soldiers killed by Russian bounty hunters…). 

    I don’t care.

    But I really do care about you. I care about you and your ability to live without fear of your government and your ability to have the full spectrum of rights currently afforded to primarily the wealthier white male population. I care about clean land, air and water so the next generations can live healthy lives, and about giving each of them the education needed to bring their talents and skills to creating a better society. 

    I care about honesty and decency, something I see in each of you and the work you do everyday, but something entirely absent in the current political climate. I care about each of the values that Indivisible Lambertville/New Hope has published on our website, and I will not rest until I believe we are on the road to rebuilding the vision for America of “liberty and justice for all.”

    Our work is to overcome all the gerrymandering, voter suppression, the siphoning of votes, foreign interference, the hacking of voting machines, the lies about voter fraud, the closing of polls in democrat-leaning districts, the disenfranchising of registered voters, ballot harvesting, obstructionism, and the lack of enthusiasm for politics in general.

    Our work is to elect the honest, decent, compassionate human being that stands in direct opposition to the reality show farce that has polluted the presidency. Our work is to ensure we maintain the House and elect a Democrat majority in the Senate. Our work is to bring good, qualified legislators to state and local positions that share our values. 

    Please, please, please, make a commitment to a minimum hours of time per week to apply to GOTV.  We have a breadth of tools in the ILNH GOTV Toolkit which is continually being updated with new opportunities. We are sending weekly GOTV alerts of ways to keep active and all from the comfort of your home. There are virtual social gatherings so you can chat, have your dinner and/or glass of wine while writing postcards to voters all across the country. There are workshops for making your own personal GOTV video to post to YouTube and our website and share with your networks. 

    Fight hard. Dream big. Visualize Joe Biden, Amy McGrath, Jamie Harrison, Mark Kelly, Sara Gideon, Cal Cunningham, John Hinklelooper, Cory Booker, Tom Malinowski and other Dems declared in a landslide win for Democrats November 4.  

    And then…we dance! 

    In solidarity and with much love,

    Deb

  • Celebrating the 19th Amendment, And the Long Road to Equality in Voting

    Contributed by Sharon M. Hallanan.

    Imagine working on a project that you care about so deeply that you devote your entire life to it. You dive into it with great passion, and even get arrested for breaking rules that are demonstrably unjust and unfair.  

    If you tuned in to last month’s Indivisible Zoom Community Gathering, you heard me speak with deep admiration and respect for Congressman John Lewis, who died on July 17, after a lifetime of fighting for voting rights, among other important civil rights and progressive causes.

    But although that opening paragraph well describes the life led by Congressman John Lewis, it also describes the fierce fighters for women’s suffrage. Women whose names you may know, and many, many, many others, worked tirelessly for many long years to try to secure women’s right to vote.  

    This year, and this month particularly, we’re celebrating a significant milestone in that fight – the ratification of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which states simply that regarding the citizen’s right to vote, the United States and each of the individual States are prohibited from discriminating on the basis of sex.

    That amendment became officially part of the Constitution on August 26. 1920, so certainly on August 26 this year, we should celebrate! But to truly appreciate that milestone, let’s realize how very hard fought a victory it was.

    You’ve all heard of Susan B. Anthony, right? Did you know that she, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Sojourner Truth, all worked for decades to advocate for women’s right to vote, and yet none of them lived long enough to ever legally vote?  They each tried anyway, but were turned away, and Anthony was arrested for her attempt. She adamantly refused to ever pay the fine!  Stanton and Anthony worked together on suffrage issues for 50 years – would you have persevered that long? It’s a sad truth regarding the 1848 Women’s Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, NY, that of the 68 women attendees who signed that Convention’s Declaration of Sentiments, only Charlotte Woodward was alive on Election Day 1920, and at age 91, she was ill that day, bedridden and unable to vote.

    Not surprisingly, when Alice Paul of New Jersey began working in the U.S. women’s suffrage movement in 1910, after having worked in the suffrage movement in England, she took a single-minded approach to the task. Recognizing the many important social issues that the suffragists before her had tackled simultaneously, Paul was committed to focus solely on voting, and to seek to amend the Constitution to secure that right for women.  She organized the massive 1913 suffrage parade in Washington, D.C., and led the Silent Sentinels, the group of women who in 1917 picketed daily in front of the White House to demand the right to vote. These women faced arrests and imprisonment, and went on hunger strikes, to keep the suffrage issue in the forefront of public attention and demand change.

    As in so many things, the suffrage issue was much more difficult and complex for African American women.  They wanted equal voting rights, but had many other fundamental issues to address too.  With life-or-death battles against slavery and lynching, they could not afford limiting their energies solely to voting rights, but they did work hard on that issue, despite facing racist attitudes, including from other suffragists.  They were aware that the 19th Amendment’s ratification would be only a beginning to securing voting equality. They saw that Black men, who should have had secure voting rights since the 15th Amendment’s ratification in 1870, were instead denied full voting rights with poll taxes, reading tests, and other racist challenges.  Therefore, through the National Association of Colored Women and other such Black women’s clubs, which had been formed as early as 1793, Black women fought for voting equality from long before 1920, and continued through the adoption of the Voting Rights Act in 1965 and beyond.

    So much struggle, so many setbacks, over so many decades.  But, nevertheless, women persisted. And slowly but steadily, it has made a profound impact, with currently more than 100 women in Congress, a woman serving as Speaker of the House, and a woman nominee for Vice President on the Democratic ticket in 2020. If you agree that this representation makes a big difference in how public policies are crafted and in how society views the potential of women and girls, please help spread the word that August 26, officially designated by Congress as “Women’s Equality Day,” is a wonderful day worthy of celebration. And I think that the best way to truly celebrate this achievement is to VOTE, VOTE, VOTE – in every election, every year!

  • Just the Facts – Women voters

    Contributed by Olga Vanucci.

    • November 2, 1920, was the first election in which women from every state were allowed to vote, following the ratification of the 19th amendment on August 18 of that year.
    • In 1920, 36% of eligible women turned out to vote, compared with 68% of men. The low turnout for women was partly due to other barriers to voting, such as literacy tests, long residency requirements and poll taxes.
    • In every presidential election since 1980, the proportion of eligible female adults who voted has exceeded the proportion of eligible male adults who voted.
    • In 2016, 63% of eligible women and 59% of eligible men voted.
    • In 2016, 54% of women voted for Clinton and 39% voted for Trump.
    • Biden is leading in the polls among female registered voters by 59% to 35%.  Don’t count on the polls!  
    • https://www.whenweallvote.org/ … we win.

    Sources:  https://cawp.rutgers.edu/sites/default/files/resources/genderdiff.pdf

    and

    https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2018/08/09/an-examination-of-the-2016-electorate-based-on-validated-voters/ and

    https://www.cnn.com/2020/06/13/politics/biden-women-voters-analysis/index.html