This year’s elections in Louisiana didn’t go the way that voting rights advocate Ashley Shelton had hoped, with the far-right conservative attorney general replacing a term-limited Democratic governor and consolidating Republican control in the state.

Turnout was just 37%, despite the efforts of activists like her.

“Even when you work hard and you do all the things you’re supposed to, you get an unfortunate outcome, which was these statewide elections,” said Shelton, the executive director of Power Coalition for Equity & Justice in Louisiana.

She said it will be a challenge to regain trust from the communities of color she typically focuses on, mostly because of a constant drumbeat of disappointments in recent years, from attacks on voting rights to the failure of a sweeping student loan forgiveness plan. While Louisiana is not a battleground for national races, Shelton’s experience in the state serves as a window into some of the challenges President Joe Biden faces as his reelection campaign plans strategies to engage the diverse communities that helped him win in 2020.

  • @HWK_290
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    1011 months ago

    Hey, wanna live in a fascist regime where your ethnicity will be eventually and systematically persecuted? No?

    OK THEN VOTE FOR BIDEN

    • Blaine
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      211 months ago

      “But the other guy is worse!”

      That’s just not gonna cut it anymore.

      • Flying Squid
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        1611 months ago

        The other guy literally said he was going to be a dictator.

        If that doesn’t cut it for you, I guess you’re okay with a dictator.

        • @Ensign_Crab
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          611 months ago

          “Not a literal dictator” is the extent of centrist ambition.

  • @TheBananaKing
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    211 months ago

    “I enjoy bombing brown people so much, I overrode congress to spend billions on it”

    That one will go down a treat.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    111 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    WASHINGTON (AP) — This year’s elections in Louisiana didn’t go the way that voting rights advocate Ashley Shelton had hoped, with the far-right conservative attorney general replacing a term-limited Democratic governor and consolidating Republican control in the state.

    “Even when you work hard and you do all the things you’re supposed to, you get an unfortunate outcome, which was these statewide elections,” said Shelton, the executive director of Power Coalition for Equity & Justice in Louisiana.

    She said it will be a challenge to regain trust from the communities of color she typically focuses on, mostly because of a constant drumbeat of disappointments in recent years, from attacks on voting rights to the failure of a sweeping student loan forgiveness plan.

    While Louisiana is not a battleground for national races, Shelton’s experience in the state serves as a window into some of the challenges President Joe Biden faces as his reelection campaign plans strategies to engage the diverse communities that helped him win in 2020.

    Recently, a panel of three federal appeals court judges ruled that private individuals and groups do not have the ability to sue under a key section of the Voting Rights Act.

    Yterenickia Bell, senior director of the And Still I Vote Program at the Leadership Conference Education Fund, will be targeting women of color between age 18 and 35 in 11 states, including Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.


    The original article contains 1,569 words, the summary contains 237 words. Saved 85%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!