A volunteer army stormed the field after Donald Trump’s election in 2016. The forces are vast and decentralized, but they’re united by a common mission: to oppose his policies, pressure their local #Republican representatives and elect #Democrats to replace them in the Nov. 6 midterms. Some of these activists call themselves “the Resistance.” Trump and his allies call them an “angry mob.” On the ground it’s just called participatory #democracy. Hundreds of thousands of volunteers, allied with thousands of autonomous groups, are doing the grunt work of propelling their neighbors to the #polls, using tactics tailored to their communities. Suburban #moms are knocking on doors in North Carolina battlegrounds; racial-justice organizers in Georgia are mobilizing black voters in churches and restaurants; college students in Pennsylvania are using #socialmedia to reach new voters. In Texas, immigrant-rights activists are helping #Latino voters get their paperwork in order. Teenage gun-safety advocates from Florida are on bus tours to register other newly eligible #voters. It’s not that the Democrats are being pulled left. It’s more that they are being pulled local. What works for voters in the Bronx may not work for voters in Iowa, and in the midterms it doesn’t have to. If Democrats retake one or both houses of Congress, it will be largely because of this emerging national network of #progressive organizers. But winning the midterms is just the first step, they say, in a movement designed to rebuild and transform local party infrastructure that had been hollowed out during Barack Obama’s presidency. Now these organizers are helping to build a new Democratic pipeline, nominating a historic number of women and people of color and repopulating state and local races with energetic young candidates. The result is not only a new class of candidates to run in 2018, 2020 and beyond. It could also change the structure of the Democratic Party itself. Read the full cover story on TIME.com. Photo-Illustration by @pablodelcan for TIME; animation by @brobeldesign

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 10月18日 21時03分


A volunteer army stormed the field after Donald Trump’s election in 2016. The forces are vast and decentralized, but they’re united by a common mission: to oppose his policies, pressure their local #Republican representatives and elect #Democrats to replace them in the Nov. 6 midterms. Some of these activists call themselves “the Resistance.” Trump and his allies call them an “angry mob.” On the ground it’s just called participatory #democracy. Hundreds of thousands of volunteers, allied with thousands of autonomous groups, are doing the grunt work of propelling their neighbors to the #polls, using tactics tailored to their communities. Suburban #moms are knocking on doors in North Carolina battlegrounds; racial-justice organizers in Georgia are mobilizing black voters in churches and restaurants; college students in Pennsylvania are using #socialmedia to reach new voters. In Texas, immigrant-rights activists are helping #Latino voters get their paperwork in order. Teenage gun-safety advocates from Florida are on bus tours to register other newly eligible #voters. It’s not that the Democrats are being pulled left. It’s more that they are being pulled local. What works for voters in the Bronx may not work for voters in Iowa, and in the midterms it doesn’t have to. If Democrats retake one or both houses of Congress, it will be largely because of this emerging national network of #progressive organizers. But winning the midterms is just the first step, they say, in a movement designed to rebuild and transform local party infrastructure that had been hollowed out during Barack Obama’s presidency. Now these organizers are helping to build a new Democratic pipeline, nominating a historic number of women and people of color and repopulating state and local races with energetic young candidates. The result is not only a new class of candidates to run in 2018, 2020 and beyond. It could also change the structure of the Democratic Party itself. Read the full cover story on TIME.com. Photo-Illustration by @pablodelcan for TIME; animation by @brobeldesign


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