Group Profile

On The Ground: Texas Rising

Update: The world has changed due to the Covid-19 crisis since this was written in early March. All of us at Airlift hope that you and yours—and those in the grassroots organizations we support--are staying as safe and well as possible during these uncertain and anxious times.

Right now our groups are figuring out what they need to meet the current moment. Texas Rising, which is based on campuses that are largely shut down except for online learning, is utilizing its nimble resourcefulness to adapt. They currently need funding to support additional text and phone banks, phone and internet stipends, remote home office functionality costs, and upgraded Zoom accounts. 

These are times of enormous strain and limited bandwidth. But if you’re so inclined and still can, please consider supporting Texas Rising and all the other great grassroots organizations Airlift funds by donating at https://secure.actblue.com/donate/airlift. Your generosity makes a difference, now more than ever. Thank you, and be well!

***

By Lorrie Goldin

It’s been said that Texas isn’t a red state or a blue state—it’s a non-voting state. But that’s beginning to change. Huge increases in turnout, especially among young and Latinx voters, are turning the Lone Star State increasingly purple, threatening the strong conservative grip on its more than 25 million residents. At the national level, we saw this in 2016 when Hillary Clinton significantly narrowed the margins of loss from 2012. In 2018 Beto O’Rourke came tantalizingly close to defeating Senator Ted Cruz. That same year, two U.S. House seats and 12 State House seats flipped to the Democrats, with similar gains in local races throughout the state. For this year’s Super Tuesday primary, turnout in the Democratic primary skyrocketed past 2016 numbers.

In Texas, people under 35 make up half the voting age population, and 6 out of 10 are people of color (predominantly Latinx). Turbo-charging these demographic advantages has been a key strategy behind the success of turning non-voters into voters. Airlift is pleased to support two organizations deserving huge credit for this achievement. MOVE Texas, which Airlift has funded since our inception, is a campus-based organization that registered 30,000 students in 2018, increasing the early voting youth turnout by 500 percent. Now we are proud to introduce the newest member of our Airlift family: Texas Rising

Dedicated to building the power of young people in communities and at the ballot box, Texas Rising has burst onto the political landscape with ambition, enthusiasm, and effectiveness. They focus on voter registration and turnout of young Texans; organizing on college campuses; youth leadership development and trainings; grassroots and digital organizing; and issue advocacy. Key priorities are LGBTQ equality, reproductive justice, immigrant rights, criminal justice reform, voting rights, and climate justice. The organization has put together an amazingly helpful online scorecard to show how every state legislator has voted on relevant bills. 

With a presence on more than 20 college and university campuses across the state, Texas Rising is active in every major metropolitan center in the fastest growing areas for under-represented communities of color. Chapters engage in voter registration drives, Get-Out-The-Vote campaigns, issue and candidate forums, hands-on political training, as well as creative direct actions and media events. Texas Rising is also expanding their voter registration and education efforts into high schools. Along with other partners in the Texas Youth Power Alliance, they are already half way to their goal of registering 100,000 new voters before November’s election. 

Rae Martinez, Texas Rising’s Director, caught the activism bug while attending community college in San Antonio. “No one in my family had ever been civically engaged in any real way,” Martinez explained. Then, they began hanging out with a friend who started telling them what was happening in the world, including a hearing on a non-discrimination ordinance to expand protections for gender identity, expression and sexual orientation. Martinez recalls, “I have to go to this. I’m a trans queer Texan. I have a lot of friends who are queer and trans. I wanted to show up, speak for my community, talk about why we need these protections when it comes to employment. Thankfully, the ordinance passed.” This sparked further involvement: registering voters with a local organization, becoming a regional field coordinator in San Antonio. The work helped Martinez build community and organize young people in San Antonio, then in a larger swath of the state before joining Texas Rising two years ago.

Martinez’s dream is “to establish youth power so that elected officials work on the issues we care about most,” ensuring that politicians can’t skirt the issues anymore. “If they don’t have a real solution, they won’t be elected into office.” 

Since the U.S. Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act in 2013, Texas, long known for its voting restrictions, has led the South in eliminating polling locations, disproportionately affecting Latinx communities. Texas Rising has fought to preserve polling locations on campuses, and Martinez describes how they packed a hearing at Texas State to protest: “’Don’t make it difficult for us to vote’…we won!” 

Impressive victories abound. During the 2019 Legislative session, Texas Rising fought numerous bills using religion to discriminate against LGBTQ Texans; as a result, only ONE bill passed, and it was watered down. They fought attacks by corporate interests against paid sick policies, and all attempts to take those benefits away were defeated. Texas Rising’s advocacy paid off in opposing one of the worst anti-voter bills in the country—protecting voting rights for millions of Texans! And, of course, the fight goes on against the numerous bills filed that attack and stigmatize abortion rights.

Thank you, Texas Rising, for your inspiring grassroots organizing. You are the future of Texas, and Texas is the future of America. 

[Series] On The Ground: LUCHA

Abril Gallardo, Communications Director, LUCHA

Abril Gallardo, Communications Director, LUCHA

Post by Lorrie Goldin

Arizona has been turning from deep red to shades of purple and blue. The state is increasingly seen as part of a viable path to the White House for Democrats in 2020, even more so after the blue wall of Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania crumbled in 2016. Voter turnout skyrocketed in the 2018 mid-terms, especially among women, young people, and people of color. Also key to Arizona’s rise in national politics is its role in the U.S. Senate: Democrat Krysten Sinema won in 2018, and there’s a good chance another Democrat will join her there in 2020. There have been increasing progressive gains in local elections as well, including the first Latina mayor of Tucson.

A big reason for these victories has been the hard work of grassroots organizations such as Living United for Change in Arizona, proudly funded by Airlift. LUCHA—which means struggle in Spanish, organizes low- and moderate-income families and immigrant communities in the fight for a $15 minimum wage and other workers’ rights, better education and healthcare, criminal justice reform, and immigrant, economic, social, housing, and climate justice.

LUCHA was founded in 2009, right before Arizona’s legislature passed SB 1070, better known as “Show Me Your Papers.” Alex Gomez, LUCHA’S co-director, notes how this notorious law (later declared unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court) sparked the massive grassroots organizations that have worked tirelessly to reach and empower Latinos in both metropolitan and rural communities via massive voter registration and participation campaigns. “When SB 1070 happened, our communities came together and decided, with the little investment we had, to start doing voter registration,” Gomez says. “Those children that were experiencing their parents being detained and deported are actually 18 years old or older now and are ready to vote.”

Those not eligible to vote have also joined the fight. One such person is Dreamer Abril Gallardo Cervera, one of the founding volunteers of LUCHA. With the group since 2010, Gallardo is currently the Communications Director of LUCHA and its sister organization, Arizona Center for Empowerment (ACE). In 2016, she helped the Bazta Arpaio Campaign unseat the infamous Sheriff Arpaio. 

Gallardo first came to LUCHA because she wanted to learn her rights to protect her family and herself from SB 1070. “I came feeling alone and scared, and ten years later I would’ve never thought that I was going to find my village and chosen family in LUCHA,” she says.

That village has done amazing work. In addition to registering 20,000 new voters last year, with plans to add an additional 30,000 in 2020, LUCHA was instrumental in passing a much higher minimum wage and paid time off bill in 2016, then halting recent attempts to sabotage the new law. This past year LUCHA Listens was launched—a community engagement program to learn about and advocate for issues mattering most to people in their everyday lives. This will culminate in a Peoples’ Budget, reflecting the values and priorities of Arizonans who have been historically overlooked. Economic justice is central to everything LUCHA does. The organization also promotes democracy, supporting an Automatic Voter Registration ballot initiative and beating back the Arizona’s conservative-dominated Legislature’s attacks on voting rights.

It’s one thing to register new voters, quite another to ensure they turn out. That’s why year-round, issue-oriented engagement by local activists who are part of their communities is so important. LUCHA makes sure people get not only to the polls, but to town halls and the halls and offices of state legislators.  The organization builds neighborhood teams, offers leadership training, Lobby Days, political education, and civic engagement, and teaches young people how to share their personal stories through its #VOTEriaAZ Campaign. Noting that stories are “the antidote to apathy,” Gallardo explains that “when young leaders go to supermarkets, laundromats or parking lots at churches to register people to vote, they focus on having intentional conversations with those individuals to make sure they remember their stories on Election Day.” 

LUCHA has a robust program for engaging high-school and college students. They also know how to have FUN! Earlier this month, Posada 2019: A Night of Pride and Joy celebrated all their recent accomplishments and plans for the work ahead. 

Gallardo’s energy and dedication are contagious, and vital in overcoming the constant chipping away of progress by Arizona’s traditional and conservative power brokers. What inspires and motivates her is “witnessing year after year the spirit of persistence, joy, and pride that our members show no matter the circumstances.” That’s how you build People Power, with true co-governance between the community, legislature, and those mobilizing in the streets. Seeing progressive people from the community get elected to office and disrupting systems of oppression make it all worthwhile. 

Our hats are off to Abril and everyone else at LUCHA. They are the vital heart of our democracy and our future. On to 2020!

***

Your generosity makes a difference. Please support LUCHA and all the other great grassroots organizations Airlift funds by donating at https://secure.actblue.com/donate/airlift. Thank you!

[Series] On The Ground: New Virginia Majority

1571886357016blob.jpg

Post by Lorrie Goldin


(UPDATE: November 7th, 2019)

The results are in, and Democrats won big in Virginia last week! They now control the State Senate 21-19, and the House of Delegates by 53-41. Thanks to New Virginia Majority for their tireless efforts in helping achieve this great victory for the people of Virginia, and to Airlift donors who supported them. Onto 2020!

Check out this wonderful op-ed published in the New York Times by Tram Nguyen, NVM's co-executive director, about how their model of year-round grass-roots organizing is key. It's the model Airlift supports, in Virginia and other crucial districts throughout the country.


(ORIGINAL POST: November 4th, 2019)

The 2020 election is now a year away, but an early harbinger of which way the political winds will blow is right around the corner. Virginia holds statewide elections tomorrow, November 5th, for all 40 seats in the State Senate and all 100 seats in the House of Delegates. The outcome will determine not only important policy directions, but who controls the crucial task of redistricting following the 2020 census. New Virginia Majority (NVM), one of the groups Airlift proudly funds, is right there in the thick of it, working hard among communities of color and young people not only to register new voters, but to make sure they turn out to cast their ballots.

We got an early taste of the power of NVM’s and other groups’ grassroots organizing in Virginia’s 2017 elections, when the House of Delegates saw massive gains by Democrats, upending a 2-1 dominance by Republicans to draw nearly even. In fact, majority control was determined by drawing a name out of a bowl, since the vote was tied between the two top candidates (the Republican won).

In 2019, New Virginia Majority is hard at work again, leaving nothing to chance. Just two seats need to flip in both the State Senate and the House of Delegates to shift the balance of power. Already new voter registration statewide has increased by more than 70% compared to 2015. NVM has registered more than 13,000 new voters this year alone, on top of the thousands they registered and turned out for the 2017 elections. NVM’s ACE Collaborative, which focuses on turning out the vote among the several hundred thousand Asian American Pacific Islander residents in Northern Virginia, has led a massive canvassing effort.

NVM has also engaged another marginalized population—former prisoners, almost 200,000 of whom, had their voting rights restored by Democratic governors since 2016. Shawn and Mr. Nathaniel, two Norfolk residents who had never been allowed to vote before, will proudly cast their first ballot on November 5th now that NVM organizers Kymetta and Katie helped restore their civil rights and registered them to vote. New Virginia Majority has also focused on reaching out to people who do not use the Department of Motor Vehicles to make sure they are properly registered. By November 5th, NVM organizers and volunteers will have knocked on more than a quarter million doors multiple times to engage as many people as possible. “This is a generational election and will determine how Virginia is governed for years to come,” notes NVM’s Political Director, Maya Castillo.

1571886604946blob.jpg

Shana Boston, Regional Field Director for the Richmond area, is one of those tireless organizers out knocking on doors and talking to people. Being on the ground is extremely rewarding because she meets so many great people who share their stories and experiences. Boston got involved with NVM because she wanted to be a voice for those who look like her and to help educate community members about local problems and how they, too can get involved in politics so their voices can be heard. In this era of extremely close outcomes, she points out that their one vote can make or break an election.

“What motivates me is seeing different folks work hard and come together to help those around them. Helping others is essential to my life and being around such positive energy in the workplace just pushes me more as a person,” says Boston. 

The issues most on people’s minds are health care, livable wages and affordable housing, and here’s where Boston’s connections with the community really shine. She shares a success story that really touched her: “I was out canvassing and ran into someone who had been in the system. They'd been working hard to get on the right track and do the right things, but their past was hindering them from getting to where they were trying to go. A candidate I was out knocking doors for was actually tackling a lot of those problems that person encountered. I was able to share the information with this individual as well as give him contact information to look more into these programs. Knowing that I've made a difference and being able to leave them with a little more knowledge than before makes it all worthwhile.”

This is the kind of commitment and deep engagement that turns a non-voter into a voter. Thanks to the tireless efforts of Boston and her fellow NVMers, they’ll make a crucial difference on November 5th and beyond.

After that, Boston says, it’s on to the legislative session and keeping voters engaged and active for the upcoming presidential race.

**

Check back for more “On the Ground” profiles of Airlift-funded groups.