Activist Patrisse Cullors Delivers Final Rallying Cry to Black Voters: 'Add to the Power We Built in the Streets'

Election Day is finally here, after a historic early voting period that has seen record numbers of voters turning up across the country to make their voices heard at the ballot box. But although we are many decades removed from the Jim Crow laws that formally barred Black voters from voting, ghosts of the past…

Election Day is finally here, after a historic early voting period that has seen record numbers of voters turning up across the country to make their voices heard at the ballot box. But although we are many decades removed from the Jim Crow laws that formally barred Black voters from voting, ghosts of the past will be present in precincts across the country today. We can expect to see voter suppression visible once again, witnessed in the disproportionately long lines at majority-Black polling stations, revamped Voter ID laws, malfunctioning voting machines and tossed-out ballots.

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But Patrisse Cullors, co-founder and executive director of the Black Lives Matter Global Network, has an urgent, final pitch to Black Americans: You know whatโ€™s at stake; you know the undeniable power of your voice, and you know your vote can bring this country closer to being the place it was long promised to be.

In her โ€œclosing statementโ€ to Black Americans on behalf of the Black Lives Matter PAC, Cullors reminds viewers of the Black Lives Matter movementโ€™s substantial gains this year.

โ€œFor the first time, a majority of people living inside this country, regardless of race or ethnicity, stood with us in solidarity to affirm Black Lives Matter,โ€ she notes, additionally referencing the movementโ€™s growing political agenda, evidenced at this yearโ€™s Black National Convention in the Breathe Act, โ€œour modern-day civil rights bill.โ€

But itโ€™s also been a year of immeasurable loss, where the limits of that power were certainly on display just as much as the victories.

โ€œOur power couldnโ€™t get the knee off Georgeโ€™s neck. We didnโ€™t have enough power to make sure Breonna got a good nightโ€™s sleep. We didnโ€™t have the power to keep Elijahโ€™s dance party going,โ€ says Cullors, referencing just a handful of Black people who lost their lives to police brutality in the last two years. โ€œWe owned the street, but we didnโ€™t own the halls of power.โ€

But on Election Day, Black Americans have a chance to change thatโ€”using their ballot to extend the power they wielded on the streets to help reshape district attorneyโ€™s offices, state capitols, Congress, and yes, the White House.

This doesnโ€™t mean it will be easy, Cullors acknowledges.

โ€œWhen you step into the voting booth or fill out your absentee ballot, thatโ€™s the power we can add to the power we built in the streets,โ€ Cullors says. โ€œPromise me, you wonโ€™t give that power back.โ€

Watch Cullorsโ€™ entire message here:

Straight From The Root

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