A Crash Course in Making Political Change | Katie Fahey | TED

50,950 views ・ 2023-11-22

TED


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00:04
When the Flint water crisis happened in Michigan,
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I was already feeling pretty disillusioned with the state of the world.
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I was 27, I had an hour-long commute to work.
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I worked in the recycling industry, which I liked,
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but I spent most of my day crawling around in garbage cans.
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And I would listen to the radio on my hour-long commute
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and hear about how there were all these bills
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that the people of Michigan wanted to see passed,
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yet our legislature wasn't doing anything about it.
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And I found out that the reason they weren't
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was because of a thing called gerrymandering,
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which basically meant that when voting districts were being drawn,
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our politicians would pick and choose which voters they wanted voting for them
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to all but guarantee that they were going to win the election,
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or that their political party was going to win an election.
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I kept thinking like: How is this the world we live in?
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Kids don't have clean water,
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politicians aren't doing anything and aren't afraid of our vote.
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Like, doesn't anybody care?
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And why doesn't somebody do something about this?
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And I didn't realize that soon, by accident,
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I would figure out that actually a lot of people do care.
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That next morning, before going to work,
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just kind of out of frustration,
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I made a post on Facebook, and it said:
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"Hey, I want to take on gerrymandering in Michigan.
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If you want to help, let me know :)"
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And -- the emoji was very key.
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And I didn't think that this would actually do much of anything.
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I thought maybe I'd find a couple other friends
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who thought this was a big deal.
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Maybe we'd volunteer somewhere.
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I certainly didn't think that it would lead
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to a political movement of over 10,000 people,
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that it would lead to amending our state constitution
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or actually restoring faith in democracy in our state in general.
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But when I went to work
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and then at lunchtime, checked social media,
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I started to see that people were responding.
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And they were saying things like,
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"I've cared about this issue for such a long time.
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I'm so glad you're doing something about it."
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"Please let me know how I can help."
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"Katie, let's do this thing."
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And that's when it struck me like, oh no.
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(Laughter)
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These people think I know what I'm doing,
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and I did not.
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So I quickly Googled: “How do you end gerrymandering?”
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(Laughter)
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And it turns out that it's all related to a process
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called the redistricting process.
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And if you wanted to end gerrymandering,
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you had to get the politicians to stop being the ones
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getting to pick and choose who their voters were.
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And that made a lot of sense,
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because when politicians would draw these lines,
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instead of keeping communities together,
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we would get districts that look like this.
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In no way does that represent an actual group of people.
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(Laughter)
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And why this was particularly important in Michigan
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is we're a pretty purple state.
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And what I mean by that
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is that about half of us vote for Democrats
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and about half of us vote for Republicans.
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And that should mean
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that about half of our representatives should be Democrats
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and about half of them should be Republicans.
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But depending on which political party would be in charge
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of that redistricting process,
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they would actually have a majority of the elected representatives,
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or sometimes even a super majority,
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even though they might have received less than half of the votes
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or exactly half.
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And that would then mean
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that they don't even have to talk to anybody on the other side of the aisle,
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when passing any kind of laws.
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And the other important part
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is that redistricting only happens once every 10 years.
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So you have half of the state being locked entirely out
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of the decision-making process for 10 years at a time.
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It did not seem like a good way to be doing democracy.
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So we went to the politicians and we were like,
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"You guys should change that."
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And they were like, "No."
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(Laughter)
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They were not interested in giving themselves less power.
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But thankfully, we figured out
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that in Michigan we had a form of direct democracy,
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and it was called the ballot initiative process.
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And so I turned to my coworker Kelly,
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we were at our recycling job,
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and we started getting to work to figure out,
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OK, what is this ballot initiative process?
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What can this actually do?
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And we broke it down into three different steps.
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One, we had to write constitutional language.
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Didn't know how to do that.
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Two, we had to gather a lot of signatures
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and we didn't know how to do that either.
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Three, we had to get about half of our state to vote "yes"
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on wanting to amend the constitution to end gerrymandering.
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And guess what?
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We didn't know how to do that either.
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But we had this Facebook post
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that then we turned into a Facebook group,
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and we started seeing all of these people coming in who were absolutely amazing.
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A lot of them were just like me, they voted consistently,
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they cared about the world's problems,
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but they weren't really interested in volunteering for a political campaign
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or one party or the other.
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But these people are amazing.
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I mean, we had veterinarians, doctors, birthing doulas.
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We had butchers and veterans
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and even 16-year-old kids who couldn't vote yet
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but wanted to be a part of creating a change
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so that by the time they could vote, it would actually be legit.
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So what we started to do was figure out, OK, what are all these campaign tasks?
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And then what are all these skills we have?
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And how do we start bringing them together?
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For example, we had a woman
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who had been in charge of the Renaissance Festival
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for years in Michigan.
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And she actually started creating our first fundraising plan.
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And the reason she did that
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is because she had experience raising money for kind of weird stuff.
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(Laughter)
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And we had another woman who is absolutely amazing,
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her name was Jamie,
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she was an engineer and a retired high school math teacher,
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and she was basically the only person
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who had actually volunteered for a political campaign before.
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So she had gathered signatures,
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she had knocked on doors,
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and using her skills in engineering and math,
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she figured out, how could we take thousands of us
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to actually end up reaching millions of voters.
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And that all was really exciting.
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And then I had a volunteer, Rebecca,
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and she came up to me and she's like, "I really want to volunteer.
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I have time to do it, but I don't think there's any way I can contribute."
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I was like, "Alright, well, what do you do?"
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She was a stay-at-home mom.
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And I said, “First of all, that comes with a lot of skills.
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So we've got a lot to work with. But what are your hobbies?"
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She said, "I'm a Jazzercise instructor and a woodcarver."
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Great, great.
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We're going to find a place.
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So we started thinking, how could we apply these skills?
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Well, it turns out, in order to gather a bunch of signatures,
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you actually need a bunch of clipboards.
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And buying clipboards, even in bulk, is super expensive.
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And we started from a Facebook post, so we did not have a lot of money.
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And when we went to our Facebook group and we said,
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"Hey, can you guys help us figure out what we might be able to do,"
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it turns out we not only had one, but several wood carvers.
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And the woodcarvers said, "Hold on, give us a second."
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They went away, made a plan and came back.
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And they had decided to create gift registries at Home Depots and Lowe's
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across the state,
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reserving wood so we could cut our own clipboards.
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Then they found warehouses where we could then cut those clipboards
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and start assembling them.
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Then they were thinking a lot about these clipboards,
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so they started to think about like,
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how do we make them longer so they can hold both a petition
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as well as gathering contact information from people.
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And then they wanted all of us to be able to be recognized as volunteers.
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So they added a nice little red stripe
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so that people could know that we're part of the Ending Gerrymandering campaign.
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And they even thought about how could we turn this clipboard itself,
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if we're going to make such an investment in them,
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into an actual tool to educate people on the process in general.
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They ended up being able to make these clipboards
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for only 33 cents each instead of 11 dollars.
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Yes.
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And the only reason we were able to do any of that,
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so that everybody could have a professional tool
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that made them feel confident when talking to strangers about civics,
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was because we had a wood carver as a volunteer.
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And that was one of the first moments when I started to realize
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that like, us not "doing politics" as our day job was actually our strength.
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We were looking at democracy as how we hoped it would be
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instead of the brokenness that it already was.
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And so when we were looking at writing the constitutional language,
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we wanted to take that spirit and apply it.
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At the time in Michigan, politicians were refusing to hold town halls.
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They didn't want to meet with their constituents
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because they were getting a lot of criticism,
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because they were writing laws that nobody wanted.
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And so at a time when we weren't being listened to,
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we thought, OK, let's go listen to each other instead.
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So we made a plan to go and ask people
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what would they want in a redistricting process,
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what would one that works well
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and that we could have trust in actually look like?
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We set a goal of going to every congressional district,
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and we weren't sure if people were going to show up
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because we were brand new organization, just starting.
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But to our surprise,
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it was standing room only at almost every single location.
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And we would hear all of these people saying, you know,
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“I have lived in this community my whole life,
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and a politician has never even visited our city once.
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And yet here you are, a random stranger from across the state,
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not only listening to me,
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but making sure that my opinion is going to be used
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in a constitutional amendment."
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And what my favorite part was,
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is you would have people coming in really skeptical of each other,
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never having really had a conversation with a Democrat or a Republican
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or an Independent.
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And they would start to talk to each other
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and realize that we had a lot more in common
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and all of us just wanted a political process that worked.
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And so instead of focusing on those differences,
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we were able to focus on actual solutions.
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So once our beautiful language written by the people of Michigan
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was ready to go,
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we then got to gather those 315,654
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registered Michigan voter signatures in 180 days.
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But thankfully, we had that math teacher, so ...
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(Laughter)
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We figured out that if we could get about 1,000 of us
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to gather about 17 signatures a day,
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we'd be able to meet this goal.
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But because we had gone around the state
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and we had listened to people about what they wanted,
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they all wanted to make sure that this constitutional amendment passed.
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We ended up having over 4,000 people
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who were willing to come and gather signatures.
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And they had tons of creativity about how to talk to people about gerrymandering,
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And they were willing to do anything to gather those signatures.
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They went into parades and even literal cow pastures
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in order to make sure
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that we were getting the people of Michigan to sign.
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And we ended up blowing that goal out of the water.
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We were able to gather over 442,000 signatures.
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(Cheers and applause)
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In only 110 days, may I add.
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And although there is no geographic requirement
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of where those signatures came from,
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we actually gathered signatures in each of Michigan's 83 counties,
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truly making it for, by and of the people of Michigan.
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So then we just needed people to vote on the darn thing.
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And on November 6, 2018,
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2.5 million people, 61 percent of the state,
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overwhelmingly voted "yes" to end gerrymandering
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and to enstate an independent citizen’s redistricting commission.
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(Cheers and applause)
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Shortly after that, we got to see
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did this constitutional law, written by a bunch of strangers, actually work?
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And so our commission started to come together.
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Thirteen strangers were selected.
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Four Democrats, four Republicans and five independent voters.
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They couldn't be politicians,
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they couldn't be lobbyists,
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they just had to be regular people.
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Those people were then invited to represent the state.
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So there was a lottery to make sure
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that the demographics actually kind of matched who the people of Michigan were,
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making it one of the only decision-making bodies in Michigan
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that actually looks like the people of Michigan.
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They then had the task of going around the state
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and gathering input from people,
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asking them what they wanted to see in the redistricting process.
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And they held town halls that also had standing room only,
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even though it was only very shortly after COVID.
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This commission ended up passing maps
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that are the most fair maps that Michigan has ever had.
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And in the first election they were used in, in 2022,
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how people voted was an exact match
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for how elected representatives were elected.
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This is my personal district in the "before" and "after" picture.
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My favorite part about all of this
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is that because we actually changed the constitution,
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it means that in future redistricting processes,
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this is going to have to be the same process that's used,
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which means that future voters will be guaranteed to have fair elections
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from here on out.
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I'm sure that each of you guys
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have something that keeps you up at night,
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that makes you feel like, man,
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I really wish somebody would do something about this.
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And maybe you feel like you aren't qualified
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to be the one to do something.
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Or maybe you feel like nobody is listening or cares about this issue.
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And I used to feel that way.
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One thing that I did not remember
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but ended up popping up on my social media
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is I made almost the exact same Facebook post about a year earlier.
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And it said like, “Hey, let’s end gerrymandering.
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Who wants to help?"
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And nobody even liked it.
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And more importantly, I also didn't do anything about it.
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And I think that's because I felt alone.
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I felt like, man, nobody's even liking this.
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Like, I must be the only weirdo who wants to end gerrymandering.
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But by the time I made that second Facebook post,
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what I realized was that actually,
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like, a lot of us were feeling the exact same way.
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We were sitting, feeling like nobody cared.
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We really wanted this issue to be dealt with,
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but we felt like there must be somebody else whose job it is.
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There must be an expert out there.
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But what I have completely learned
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is that you do not have to be an expert to get involved in democracy.
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You don't need a fancy title or a PhD,
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you don't even have to ask permission to try.
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You never know where one little step will end up leading you.
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It might change your entire life.
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And I think that's really important to remember.
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I mean, there’s a place for experts, too.
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I definitely should not perform open-heart surgery on any of you.
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I would not be good at it.
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But we are the ones who are closest to these problems.
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Our communities and our kids
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are the ones who do not have clean drinking water.
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We have the most incentive to want to fix these problems,
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because we live with its brokenness every single day.
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And we see our communities as actual communities.
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They are our homes.
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They aren't red or blue.
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They are just us.
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So I hope all of you remember that when it comes to democracy,
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all political power is inherent in the people.
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We all are those people, and this is our power.
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I hope you don't forget that.
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And you remain unafraid to create the world you want to live in.
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Thank you.
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(Cheers and applause)
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About this website

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