Category Archives: Post type

Win the Day Volume 8

When we started writing this blog eight weeks ago we thought we had a pretty straightforward purpose: to inoculate against dog-whistle politics. It seemed obvious that some politicians were going to race & gender code words to try to divide voters, to build their own careers. Then last week happened. Our hearts go out to families and communities in Pittsburgh. And Louisville. And New York, and D.C., and Florida, and California. The line from dog-whistles to hate-speech to right-wing political violence is unmistakable. And sadly predictable. Politicians have been warned. Studies have been published. Survivors have spoken out. Still, some politicians hide behind false equivalencies, whataboutism, and plausible deniability. To this we say: we see you. Your dog-whistle is disqualifying. Your anti-Semitic, anti-Muslim, anti-immigrant, anti-LGBTQ, anti-woman rhetoric is more than irresponsible; it is a contribution. It is participation. It is a building block of political violence. But while we are angry; we can’t act out of anger. We won’t demonize or name-call. We also won’t act out of fear (though we’ll admit we do feel that too). The people being targeted by right-wing hate are the very people who inspire us. People and communities who experience oppression, but still show up, still act together, they have something we want. That’s why we’re so invested in political healing. Developed by women of color, like Cara Page, it’s an active, deliberate response to the historic & everyday trauma that too many communities have lived through.

Busy Voter’s Guide to the Governor’s Race

Hey Minnesota –

The midterm election is coming up November 6.

The Busy Voter’s Guide to the Governor’s Race is here to help YOU get informed about the Governor’s race.

Wondering who else is running in your district?

Get ready with our official Busy Voter’s Guide to the Midterm Election.

It’s so simple—enter your address and you can read more about each of the candidates running in your district. Like a candidate? Add them to your sample ballot to print or email to help you remember. You can also get a reminder to vote and help finding your polling place.

We know—it’s so easy. So awesome. 

We Support Tim Walz for Governor. Here’s Why. 

In Minnesota, we believe that we’re better off together and we’re #GreaterThanFear. We want a democracy that’s inclusive and elected officials who are close to the people.

TakeAction Minnesota is a progressive people’s organization. Our member leaders endorsed Tim Walz for Governor. His opponent, Jeff Johnson, is a Hennepin County Commissioner who doesn’t align with our values. (You can learn more about him on his website. He’s a Trump guy. We’ll leave it at that.)

Tim Walz is a former 20-year classroom teacher, coach, and member of Congress who served 24 years as a member of the Army National Guard.… Continue reading »

Win the Day: Volume 7

With just over two weeks left till Election Day we know that political campaigning is only going to get hotter and louder.  And some politicians would also like to make it scarier. But we see through that. First, the fear-mongering is super obvious.  Dog-whistle politics is dated, tired, transparent, and bogus. Second, not all politicians use it.  When we speak and act from a different, values-grounded narrative, it breaks through, and rings true. This 2:00 minute ad from the Walz-Flanagan campaign is the perfect example.

Keith Ellison for Attorney General

We can imagine a world where everyone can live free, joyful lives, regardless of what they look like, where they came from, or how they worship. We can imagine a democracy that’s by the people, for the people, and is representative of the people. We can imagine a future where the feminine is highly respected, and no one is held back or harmed because of their gender or sexuality.    At TakeAction Minnesota, we believe achieving justice and strengthening our democracy requires us to take on some of the biggest challenges in our society, including systemic racism, unbridled corporate influence, and gender oppression.  

This Election, I’m Voting So All Minnesotans Can Have a Brighter, More Joyful Future

Health care matters.

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) made it so that I could stay on my parents’ health insurance until I turn 26, and it has basically kept me alive this past year. But even with expanded care, there are still thousands of people in this country who cannot access the kind of care they need.

I believe everyone has a right to care for themselves, their families, and communities. But I believe in more than that. I believe that everyone has a right not just to live, but to live in joy. Those are the values that ground me and drive me to the polls each year.

This year, we have the chance to vote for representatives who will work alongside us to build a Minnesota where everyone has the care that they need. I’m hopeful that we have the chance (not a guarantee) to elect Tim Walz and Peggy Flanagan for Governor and Lt. Governor.

 

It’s the moments of togetherness—moments where our joyfulness, hope, and healing were more important than fear tactics and statistics—that have made this election feel different for me.

 

Tim Walz is a veteran and Minnesota school teacher. Peggy Flanagan is a Native organizer, activist, and trailblazer.… Continue reading »

Win the Day: Volume 6

Make More Possible | October 15,2018

Dear Friends,

So many of us live and breathe politics because we know that through politics – and organizing – so much more can be possible for our families and in our state.

We’re continuing to call out the dog-whistle politics we’re seeing this election cycle – including state Sen. Karin Housley’s racist dog whistle comment about Michelle Obama – and we’re glad that groups like CAIR and ISAIAH are connecting the dots between corporate backed GOP campaigns and anti-Muslim campaign attack ads.

For decades, some politicians have used race-baiting and scapegoating in an attempt to divide the political power and interests of working people.

We’re not falling for it. Minnesotans won’t be divided. Together, we can accomplish anything.

In Minnesota, We’re Greater Than Fear

A few days ago, a brand new ad came out from Minnesota’s #GreaterThanFear campaign. We love everything about this message and what this story represents. Politics shouldn’t be about fear, and in Minnesota, we’re stronger together.

To us, #GreaterThanFear also means being fearless in our progressive vision and direction. It means being clear and unapologetic about our values, analysis, and goals, so when it’s time to govern, we know where we stand and what we’re fighting for.… Continue reading »

Win the Day: Volume 4

Make More Possible | October 1, 2018

Dear Friends,

For the last three weeks we’ve been exploring how our political speech can make more possible.  We’ve been lifting up the best examples we can find. And reflecting a bit on how it works.

This last week, though, has been tough, in many ways.  For survivors of sexual assault, first, but it’s been hard for all of us who have listened to their stories and taken them seriously.  It’s been hard to hear and hard, at times, to know what to say. It’s been hard to stay present in the middle of the anger, fear, frustration, and disappointment that so many of us have been feeling every single day.

And it’s been hard to watch some U.S. Senators go through the motions, to play act empathy, to pretend like their minds were open when Dr. Christine Blasey Ford’s testified.

This is the kind of political speech we have been naming and challenging through Win The Day.

It’s worse than lying.  It’s different than bullsh****ng.  It’s in another league than evading, hedging, or threading the needle.  Those are run of the mill.

A number of our U.S. Senators were going through the motions by actually using our democratic process to perform the role of concerned and deliberative public servant.… Continue reading »

Welcome New TakeAction Minnesota Staff!

This is a busy time at TakeAction Minnesota. Our member leaders across Minnesota are connecting people and building power. We’re organizing to win elections. And, if you haven’t read our recent blog series, we’re doing more than that. We’re fighting to win the day.  

Last week, we announced our BOLD new executive director, Elianne Farhata long-time organizer leading us in our next chapter. We also brought on board some inspiring people to help us build, organize, lead, and dream together. Meet the newest members of TakeAction Minnesota.  

LyLy Vang Yang, Political Coordinator 

LyLy joined in June 2018 as TakeAction Minnesota’s political coordinator. Prior to TakeAction Minnesota, she was an organizer with Melvin Carter’s campaign for St. Paul Mayor and worked as a policy aide in Mayor Carter’s office, implementing a city-wide $15/hour minimum wage.  

IN HER OWN WORDS: 

I’m excited that here at TakeAction Minnesota, we don’t buy into the dominant narrative of politics. We’re grounded in collectivity and accountability and carry that during and after election season. Elections can be powerful catalysts for involvement and as the political coordinator, it’s important to me to build on the momentum that elections bring.  I’m so ready to do work alongside our member leaders, candidates, and elected officials to help develop a Minnesota where everyone can live a life full of joy.  … Continue reading »

Win the Day: Volume 3

Make More Possible | Sept. 24, 2018

Dear Friend, 

We’re one week closer to Election Day. This week, Win the Day is about creating a fair and inclusive state through our politics. 

Let’s imagine what Minnesota would be like if we decided that in our politics, everyone’s in, and nobody’s out. This simple idea could change everything.

The Trump Administration is a master of othering. Pushing people out of our society, deciding who belongs and who doesn’t. Who is and isn’t worthy.

But he didn’t invent the narratives that some politicians use to divide us by our race or class. He just exploits them.

So, fellow progressives. We need new narratives.

Imagine the revolution that would take place in our politics if we decided everyone’s in, no exception. In our health care system. In our democracy. In our circle of human concern.

This is the big change we’re fighting for. This is how we win the day. 

Here are the stories, people, and ideas we’re excited to share with you this week. 

Change the Story

How one union expanded who’s in for 85 years. 

Defining who’s in and who’s out has real consequences, in law and in culture.  And it’s never expanded without a fight.Continue reading »

Hey TakeAction Minnesota – Meet Elianne Farhat!

Dear Friends, My name is Elianne Farhat. I’m an organizer, the new executive director at TakeAction Minnesota—and a longtime sustaining member. I grew up in a big, diverse family. My mom is one of 13 kids and grew up in Central Minnesota. Her maternal grandfather moved to North St. Paul from Standing Rock Reservation and paternal grandpa grew up on a farm in Pine County.

Win the Day: Volume 2

Make More Possible | Sept. 17, 2018

Dear friend,

We launched our new political blog called Win the Day last week. Thanks for reading and sharing it.

Every week, we’re highlighting people, stories, and ideas working to #WinTheDay. To us, winning elections isn’t the same as winning the day.  It’s the work of building the core narratives that shape the ways we make meaning together.

It starts with the values that ground us.  It sets us up to imagine a future worth fighting for.

On that note, an important report was released today called Toward a More Caring Minnesota. 

Here’s what stands out: 

  • Minnesotans believe in looking out for each other. We value care and fairness, no matter our color. When a flu shot shortage swept the country in 2004, Minnesota had a massive surplus because everyone wanted to make sure the neediest folks got vaccinated first.
  • As Minnesotans, we aren’t living up to our values around care. Dog-whistle politics and corporate influence in our State Capitol, from the Freedom Club to the Center for the American Experiment, have led to massive cuts to the care we all need. 
  • Political donors and corporate interests are pulling strings in our democracy, and messing with our care. 
Continue reading »

Win the Day: Volume 1

Welcome to Win the Day, a new weekly political series from TakeAction Minnesota. We're unapologetic progressives. We dream big. Like so many of you, we're hungry to change what’s possible. That's why we're launching Win the Day. To us, winning elections isn't the same as winning the day. Winning the day is the power to change the story. The foundational stories: the ones that shape the the way we think. Who are we as Minnesotans? What are the struggles that connect us? These underlying stories show us what is and isn't possible. It’s an arena of power that, frankly, we don't always fight for.

Busy Voter’s Guide to the Primary Election

Hey there, busy voter!  On August 14th, voters like you will decide who will run to be the next DFL Governor of our state. Many voters are still undecided.  We  know you take your vote seriously and you’re looking for information you can trust.  We also know you're busy.  That's why we created this guide. In addition to sharing why TakeAction Minnesota leaders endorsed Erin Murphy and Erin Maye Quade, we rounded up facts, news articles, videos, and what people are saying about Erin to help YOU make an informed decision.  Don't worry. We got you. 

Harassment allegations against ex-Nolan staffer surface in governor’s race

Several liberal groups are calling on U.S. Rep. Rick Nolan, a Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor, to leave the governor’s race after reports of sexual harassment allegations about an ex-staffer in his office.

The allegations, reported in MinnPost on Thursday, center around former staffer Jim Swiderski, who several women said grabbed and harassed them in Nolan’s office and was allowed to leave in 2015 instead of face disciplinary actions. In 2016, Swiderski was briefly hired back as a contractor on Nolan’s re-election bid.

[…]

TakeAction Minnesota, which is actively supporting Murphy’s campaign for governor, held a press conference Friday calling on Nolan to leave the race.

“He is choosing to do nothing, he chose to do nothing when women came to him in his office. Congressman Nolan is making the wrong choice and he’s the wrong choice for Minnesota,” Elianne Farhat, program director with TakeAction, said. “It’s time for him to step down. State law doesn’t allow Nolan to be removed from the ballot at this point in the race, Farhat said, but Swanson can “clearly communicate” the path forward for her ticket.

[…]

Read more. Continue reading »

Swanson Refuses To Kick Nolan Off Gubernatorial Ticket

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — DFL gubernatorial candidate Lori Swanson breaks her silence amidst controversy surrounding her running mate.

In an anonymously-sourced article, MinnPost criticized how Congressman Rick Nolan handled a staffer accused of sexual harassment. In response, groups called for Swanson to address it and for her to drop Nolan.

“This is not a confusing moment, the choice is very clear,” said TakeAction Minnesota’s Eliane Farhat. “Times up.”

Watch here.Continue reading »

Week in Action: The Social Media Scoop

This week, we’re sharing a bunch of news and stories that were shared—or unfolded—on social media this week. Some are serious, some are funny. The bigger point of this week’s digest is that social media can be used for good, in our democracy and in our society. All of us have the power to spread joy and knowledge online. If you want to join us, start by taking the HELL YES I’ll be a primary voter pledge today.

Koch brothers’ influence in Minnesota reaches beyond just campaigns

A series of college appearances by a Minneapolis improv theater company. Opposition to a ban on flavored tobacco sales at Duluth convenience stores. Funding for St. Cloud State University’s Economics Reading Group. A reinterpretation of the federal law governing mining leases near the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. State legislation making it easier to hold protest organizers liable for damage.

[…]

Koch groups are airing TV ads in Wisconsin against Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin and have long supported Republican Gov. Scott Walker. “Walker, in some fundamental way, doesn’t run Wisconsin,” said Matt Rothschild of the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, a nonprofit that promotes openness in government. “Wisconsin is run by the Koch brothers.”

Americans for Prosperity, a tax-exempt nonprofit with chapters in 36 states, is the highest-profile Koch political entity in Minnesota. Since AFP began operations here in 2011, it has become “clearly a new force in Minnesota,” said Chris Conry of TakeAction Minnesota, a progressive group. “It’s a sophisticated effort.”… Continue reading »

For the DFL, a ‘crazy ride’ to the primary awaits

Before they can turn to taking on Republicans, Minnesota DFLers face more than two months of infighting in the high-stakes races for governor and other top political posts.

Minnesota’s Aug. 14 DFL primary now features a three-way contest for governor with no clear front-runner, a five-way race for attorney general, and a mob of candidates vying for the newly open seat in the Fifth Congressional District.

[…]

Dan McGrath, executive director of TakeAction Minnesota, a progressive group that helped secure Murphy’s endorsement, believes Murphy represents “the future of the party” in a way the other candidates do not. He dismisses the idea that voters in other parts of the state will look for a governor ticket with more geographic balance.

“I don’t buy it,” he said. “I think that the only people that it helps to talk about the divisions between greater Minnesota and urban areas is the GOP, who has made all of their politics around dividing people around race and place.”

Read more. Continue reading »

What’s next for Democrats after ‘dumpster fire’ day?

At the end of filings Tuesday, Minnesota Democrats were facing a six-way primary for attorney general in August, a sudden eight-way intraparty battle for U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison’s seat, and an unexpected, three-way primary for the open governor’s seat.

It was all part of what was described by some Democrats and Republicans as a “dumpster fire” day for Minnesota’s DFL Party.

[…]

For Dan McGrath, the executive director of TakeAction Minnesota, a progressive campaign group, the divisions in the DFL now are part of a bigger change happening in the DNA of the party. He thinks candidates like Swanson, a moderate who has been attorney general for more than a decade, represent a fading wing of the DFL party

“This is the old guard making an end run around the future of the party,” said McGrath, whose organization endorsed Murphy for governor. “For the DFL party 20 or 30 years ago, the political landscape in our state was very different. The candidates that are rising to the top right now are the ones who really understand how our state has changed demographically, racially, and they are carving out a vision for what that will look like.”

And plenty of Democrats think the glut of candidates filing for office is simply a direct result of enthusiasm across the party, voters and candidates alike.… Continue reading »

Federal Tax Cuts Leave States in a Bind

The federal tax overhaul cut taxes for millions of American families and businesses. But the law also had an unintended effect: raising the state-tax bite in nearly every state that has an income tax. 

[…]

Business groups have criticized the governor’s proposal, which they argue would make Minnesota less competitive. Some progressive groups say the state should go further, using the extra revenue generated by the federal law to fund a paid family-leave program or childhood savings accounts. This is exactly the kind of thing you could use to start the core investment of a program like that,” said Chris Conry, strategic campaigns director for TakeAction Minnesota, a liberal advocacy group. “You could give every kid born in Minnesota $500 at birth.”

Read more.
 … Continue reading »

Week in Action: What is preemption, and how can it impact Minnesota?

 

In case you missed it, this is from last Friday’s Week in Action email:

This week, we wanted to share a roundup of news stories about ‘statewide preemption.’ Across the country, local elected officials and community members are making progress on issues that help workers, LGTBQ folks, the environment, New Americans, small businesses, family farmers, and, well frankly, all of us.

In recent years, corporate interest groups started changing the rules of our democracy to block (or ‘preempt’) improvements in local laws. In cities like Birmingham, AL minimum wage workers won a pay increase, then had it cut back by the power of big business at their state capitol. Preemption is part of a national strategy to block local progress and it’s wrong.  

Why are we sharing this? Because corporate special interests are back at the capitol trying to tell local communities what they can and can’t do.

Here’s what we’re reading on preemption:

1. Fundamentals of Preemption

This article provides a grounding in terms. What is preemption? Check out the short summaries.

2. City Power in Minnesota

In Minnesota, Cities have the option to adopt a ‘Home Rule Charter’ which grants them more power over themselves. Check it out.Continue reading »

Sexual Harassment: You’re not as protected as you think you are.

*Disclaimer, I am not a lawyer. Nothing here is or should be construed as legal advice.

When I was 15, I worked at a hardware store where my coworkers were mostly older men. A few weeks into my time there, one of them, a guy in his 70’s, started to spend a lot of time standing behind me. Every once in a while, I would feel his hand brush against my butt.

He was touching my butt. At work. He was 48 years older than me and I was a minor. I wouldn’t have been able to consent to it even if he had asked. Sounds like a crime, right?

Turns out, it’s not.

Because of the #MeToo and #TimesUp movements and pushback against sexual harassment in our own state Legislature, we’re finally talking about the harassment a lot of people, especially women and particularly Women of Color and LGBTQ people, experience regularly at work.

Part of the criticism against the #MeToo movement is that people should be convicted in a court of law, not the court of public opinion. Unfortunately, even with very clear proof, the courts fall short.

You may have seen in the news recently that there’s a specific exception for butt-grabbing in Minnesota law.… Continue reading »

It’s locals vs. the Legislature, round 2: The battle over pre-emption is back at the Minnesota Capitol

For his part, TakeAction Minnesota’s Conry is watching all of the pre-emption proposals at the Legislature this year, but he’s hopeful none will pass with Dayton in the governor’s office — and as more Minnesotans learned what those bills do. “It's deeply unpopular,” he said. “When people understand that their own legislator is trying to undermine local democracy to try and prevent people from raising the minimum wage or getting sick time, no one is really excited about it.”