Showing posts with label elections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elections. Show all posts

Friday, February 5, 2010

In Search of Our Mothers' Adding Machines

Mary Geong is a natural-born leader. For most of my childhood, I was ashamed of my mother for that reason, and some other reasons too. She was too outspoken, too loud, too cheap, too Chinese, too fat, too short.

In short, she was unfeminine. Patriarchy gets us early. When I was younger, I wanted to be color-blind and ignore race, so her effusive endorsements of women and/or minority candidates for office embarrassed me.

Photo: At the racetrack w/Oakland Rotary Club

I'm not sure if mi madre identifies as feminist, but I came to see she's pretty solidly feministy. She is progressive and wore power suits with big shoulder pads during the 80s and 90s. She wore a feminist sticker I gave her when she visited our office. She believes in serving her community and giving back, through civic organizations, through donating to politicians, through advocating for Mandarin classes in the public schools.

She did not choose leadership. It chose her (this is also a common refrain amongst female US senators). But as I think is the case for many women, the household forged her first experiences in exercising power and responsibility. As a teenager and the eldest of five children, my mom became the primary caretaker for her siblings after her mother died.

Her parents were poor, illegal immigrants, so she worked at a drycleaner to pay for college. She was not an activist, and walked past the tear gas and anti-war protesters on her way to class (Mum has no recollection of tear gas, but my dad says it's true). As a child, I was disappointed she didn't participate in the mass civic disobedience of the era. I couldn't afford to get arrested - there were bills to pay, she said.

She says her career options during the 1960s were limited to be a secretary, a teacher, or a nurse. She failed her physical science courses, which ruled out being a nurse or doctor, so she became a teacher. After a few years, she decided she wanted more job security and got an MBA instead. She became a Certified Public Accountant, a field that was heavily populated by white males during that period.

Several grad degrees and professional licenses and professional organizations and a nuclear family later, my mom is your standard community politico. Raising money for candidates, telling friends and strangers how to vote, the whole shebang. But I keep asking her to run for local office, and she says no no no. That's your job, she tells me. I like to work behind the scenes, plus I don't want the pay cut, she says. The good news is my mom had been approached by several people to run for City Council for the City of Piedmont. She says she may consider running for local public office after she retires.

So here we are with few women in the political pipeline and gross under-representation in the top tiers of politics, business, academia, arts, etc. You know accomplished women like my mom. They're probably women like your mom too. They're young and old, smart and passionate, and they care deeply about the people in their communities. They would be terrific public servants - they already are public servants, really. But they are reticent to enter public life, and don't feel inclined to embark on a political career. So we just get more of the same tired moneyed privileged men coasting into office, with more of the same tired moneyed discriminatory politics.

How to we create a generation of female public servants? Do we ask ourselves and our peers to swear to an Unbreakable Vow to run for office? This is the question I was meaning to ask a panel of seasoned political journalists tonight, but it got muddled in my head. Now it's no longer muddled, and I guess I'll ask all of you for advice, my fellow young feminists-in-arms. How do we prod millions of young women and old women to rush to their election boards to declare their candidacies for public office?

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Ellie Smeal: '09 Elections, a Wake Up Call for Feminists

In both the New Jersey and Virginia gubernatorial races, social issues took a back seat to economic issues. This is understandable considering dismal unemployment figures, the housing crisis, fear of layoffs, and dwindling retirement investments. Bad economic times trump social issues.

What happened aside from the deep economic recession maybe tells the story more simply. Looking at the numbers the Virginia electorate of 2009 was not the same electorate of 2008. The 2009 electorate, to put it bluntly, was older and less racially diverse. In 2008, 20% of the Virginia electorate was under 30 years old; in 2009, it was 10%. In 2008, 70% was white, 20% black, 5% Hispanic. In 2009, 78% was white, 15% black, 2% Hispanic. Getting the vote out matters.

Feminists have much to worry about with both elections. The result is both states will have anti-choice leadership. In Virginia, the conservative Republicans also won solidly the Lt. Governor and Attorney General offices. Particularly troubling is the defeat of feminist and pro-choice Jodi Wagner for Lt. Governor, despite being generally acknowledged for her financial skills in navigating the state under the last two very popular democratic governors. As state treasurer under former Governor and now Senator Mark Warner and finance secretary under Governor Kaine, Wagner has been given much credit for Virginia avoiding the economic woes that most states have suffered and for being rated one of the best managed states fiscally.

Read the full version of this piece here.

Media Resources: Excerpted from Majority Speaks Blog 11/4/09

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

It's Election Day!

Hey all!

So it's Election Day here in the great state of Virginia, and I've cast my vote! Have you?

We want to remind everyone the importance of getting out to the polls today! In the democracy we live in, if you don't vote, you don't count. Voting is a feminist issue - as long as women and minorities stay underrepresented at the polls, we'll find ourselves fighting even harder to get policies made that support our interests and needs.

The upshot? GO VOTE! Check out Vote411.org to find your polling places, etc.

Here's just a few of the elections we're keeping an eye on:
  • Gubernatorial races right here at home in Virginia, as well as the New Jersey race.
  • Mayoral races in Houston, Atlanta, and New York City.
  • Ballot measures regarding same-sex couples and rights in Maine and Washington State.
If you live in a precinct with live elections, please get out to the polls today! We look forward to seeing the results come in.

Happy Election Day!

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Afghan Election - High Stakes and Women Being Left Out

On Thursday, Aug. 20, the polls will open for Afghanistan's presidential election. This is the first election since the U.S. led invasion in 2001, to be primarily run by Afghans, and as you can imagine, in a country that's been the site of conflict for decades, the election process has many faults. The validity of the election is threatened by potential fraud, disenfranchisement of women, strict voting regulations and threats of violence from the Taliban.

Women's votes are at particular risk due to the fact that polling locations are sex-segregated, and the country's Independent Election Commission estimates that there is a shortage of approximately 13,000 female poll workers; meaning women who do intend to vote, will have no polling place at which to do so.

Additionally, immense voter registration fraud is suspected. While male voters' ballots must include an ID photo, women's are not required to do so. Sima Samar, Chair of the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission, is extremelely concerned by the unusually high number of female voter registrations coming from traditional and conservative regions, and suspects voter fraud.

Other threats to the general election, and even moreso, to women's ability to leave home and cast their ballot, are Taliban threats of violence. Despite a government-issued request that international media not cover any election-day violence so as not to further scare and deter voters, current President, Hamid Karzai, has urged voters to cast their ballots no matter what. Additional peacekeeping troops will be deployed to protect voters.

Photo courtesy of flikr.com

Monday, June 22, 2009

"You Can't Beat Our Grandmothers"

I am sure many of you by now have seen the footage of the young girl, Neda who was shot to death over the weekend by Iranian authorities. She has become the face of this movement. As many Muslims say, she has become a martyr.

What is happening in Iran is no longer just about elections. Iranian people are fighting for their freedom, literally. They are willing to die for it and they are being killed for it in front of the world's eyes.

This weekend as I attended protest after protest, I had to stop and just absorb the scene. In this lifetime, I never thought I would see a pro-democracy rally for Iran much less be a part of it.

What is happening in Iran can change the face of the Islamic world forever. This is the first time that the people of a Muslim country, and an Islamic Republic at that, are calling fraud on their own government and demanding democracy.

I want to share with you this incredibly moving CNN interview with Iranian author Melody Moezzi because she puts the death of Neda in perspective. The actual footage of Neda laying in her own pool of blood as her father tries to save her is extremely graphic. It is your choice, but I urge you all to watch it because we must not close our eyes to what is happening in Iran. They need us and people all over the world to bear witness to their uprising. It is the least we can do.