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Win the Day: Volume 10 (The Day After)

Make More Possible | November 7, 2018 Dear friends,  When we started Win The Day, we knew we’d need to play some defense.  (See our recent post after the anti-Semitic violence in Pittsburgh.)  But we…

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The GOP Tax Plan: Whose voice does it represent?

In late November, U.S. House republicans passed their tax reform bill, and yesterday, the Senate passed their version of the bill out of committee on a party line vote.  The president and congressional republicans have…

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1st

state to defeat Voter ID at the polls

76%

Minnesota’s nation-leading voter turnout rate

1M

Minnesotans who changed their mind on the Voter Restriction Amendment from May 2011 to November 2012

RESTORING VOTING RIGHTS

We are working to restore voting rights to the 48,000 Minnesotans on probation or parole who are currently unable to vote. Even as they are part of our community, holding jobs and paying taxes, they are unable to participate in this fundamental act of citizenship.

Laws preventing people from voting until after their parole and probation work against the promise of democracy and excludes those Minnesotans who have the most to gain by voting: people of color, low-income Minnesotans, and people who are alienated and marginalized. By restoring voting rights to unimprisoned felons, we are working to back up our state’s history of robust and fair-minded democratic participation. Will you join us?

Protecting the Right to Vote

Our Democracy works best when everyone is in and nobody’s out. But our Democracy has been under attack.

Voter suppression laws are passing all over the country that disproportionally affect the elderly, the young, low-income people, and people of color. From January to April 2013 alone, 31 states introduced 82 laws that restrict the right to vote. In June, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the heart of the Voting Rights Act. This is the result of decades of harmful messaging that tells us that structural racism no longer exists and laws protection voting rights should now, naturally, expire.

Voting rights are essential to all of us. No matter who we are, where we live, what issues we are passionate about – our ability to make positive change is proportional to our political voice. To reinvigorate our democracy and strengthen our communities’ voices in Minnesota, we must turn the table on those who want to restrict our votes and create a higher expectation of who our government should work for – US!

Minnesota’s unlikely defeat of the Voter Restriction Amendment in 2012, the first in the country, shows that there is a path to improve our ownership over this fundamental right of American citizenship. When we bring together thousands of Minnesotans from across the state, over 80 partner organizations, and choose to invest in one-to-one grassroots conversations – we win!