🚨Replacement Sunday meeting🚨

Initial ballot counts for the CA–25 special election (Christy Smith vs Mike Garcia, a Hispanic Republican veteran) are not favorable. The ballots received so far have many more R than D voters. The voting deadline is postmarked Tuesday. (There are also a small number of in-person polling places and drop boxes, but no one seems to expect significant voting in person. All voters were mailed an absentee ballot.)

In lieu of our regular meeting, Naomi and I have signed up to do GOTV phone banking. We do not want to take the morale hit that would come from letting Team MAGA-Drink-Bleach flip this district.

Swing Left virtual phone bank link.

You should sign up, if you can join us, 24 hours in advance. The event runs 2:30 to 5:00, and if people are interested,, at 5:00 we can have our own brief meeting to discuss it.

Sad news

I wanted to let everyone know that we have been in touch with Jeff who we have not seen in a while and we learned that his wife Noemi died earlier this year. Here is a link to the article about her in Berkeleyside and here is his address for anyone who wants to write a note: Jeff Grund, 2706 Ashby #2, Berkeley 94705.

From Indivisible East Bay

Work with IEB on 2020 Elections: Polls Close in 6 Months!  We’ve all heard that shelter-in-place is officially set to continue through May,and Indivisible East Bay’s remote activism will continue with it, as we all do our part to minimize the virus’ spread.One way you can help: join us for remote phone-banking, which is now officially live and active! Last Sunday, a small-but-mighty team gathered on Zoom and called 150 voters to turn out the mail-in vote for Tricia Zunker in Wisconsin’s upcoming special election and recruit volunteers for Mark Kelly in Arizona. One particularly fiery AZ voter told us she’s been sending a donation to Kelly every time she gets an email from the McSally campaign. Another said her yard was proudly sporting a Biden sign among a sea of signs for the bleach-proponent-in-chief. We even walked an enthusiastic long-time voter & first-time vote-by-mail-er through the absentee ballot request process. Sound like fun to you? We’ll be (virtually) here this Saturday and have phone banks planned for every Saturday in May! 
2020 Voter Outreach Events
Canvasses:Canvassing is on hold for now, but please fill out this form to be notified as soon as it’s back on.
Remote Phone & Text Banks:Phone Bank to Wisconsin and Arizona 5/2Phone Bank to Wisconsin and Arizona 5/9Phone Bank to Arizona 5/16Text Bank to Win in 2020 5/17Phone Bank to Arizona 5/23Phone Bank to Arizona 5/30Remote Text Bank to Win in 2020 5/30
Other Voter Outreach:We’re looking to expand our outreach to Spanish-speaking voters in Arizona and beyond. Please click here to add your name to our list of people available to phone bank in Spanish. 
Note: if your info is stored with EveryAction, clicking this link will automatically add you to the list. Want to write postcards from home?
Email fiona.IndivisibleEastBay1@gmail.com and we’ll give you complete instructions, scripts and addresses from one of the groups we work with.

Sorry the formatting didn’t come through well.

Virtual Protest Thursday for virus-free voting and protecting the Post Office

The following post comes via Patti Crane of Indivisible Beach Cities/ISBLA and Michelle Maniere Fowle of The Resistance Northridge:

California Indivisibles: Tell Congress to fund #VirusFreeVoting and to protect the Post Office!

Here’s the toolkit for Thursday’s Virtual Protest: http://bit.ly/vfvdigitaltk  

Join Indivisibles and others nationwide in our #VirusFreeVoting Virtual Protest on Thursday from 3-5 pm PT!

We ask Congress to fund $4 billion for Vote at Home and we insist on protecting the Post Office. Show that NO ONE can take away our vote and our voice.

Please tag your electeds and get the #VirusFreeVoting hashtag trending.

Click the online toolkit so you can take a selfie with a sign, make a video, post a tweet or an Instagram message, share a message on Facebook. You can also send a letter to your electeds, trigger phone calls to Congress, and do even more for two straight hours of digital activism.

Sheriff budget grab item deferred

The Alameda County BOS agenda item to consider Sheriff Ahern’s outrageous funding proposal has been postponed because of the death of Supervisor Valle’s father. Valle is the current BOS chair and the swing vote on the 5-member BOS. Thanks for whatever emails and calls you already submitted. We will need to mobilize again when the item is rescheduled.

Sweden

We hear a lot about how successful Sweden’s more relaxed isolation measures are. So far in April, they have 33% excess deaths compared to 2015–19. (In fairness, after we get the US figures, which for some reason are compiled much more slowly, we may be there too. Sweden, however, seems to have rising daily deaths while we appear to have peaked.)

Four articles

The best article on how we got here:

We Are Living in a Failed State by George Packer, The Atlantic, June 2020

When the virus came here, it found a country with serious underlying conditions, and it exploited them ruthlessly. Chronic ills—a corrupt political class, a sclerotic bureaucracy, a heartless economy, a divided and distracted public—had gone untreated for years. …

Both parties were slow to grasp how much credibility they’d lost [in the 2008 financial meltdown]. The coming politics was populist. Its harbinger wasn’t Barack Obama but Sarah Palin, the absurdly unready vice-presidential candidate who scorned expertise and reveled in celebrity. She was Donald Trump’s John the Baptist [what a phrase! —AJL].

We Are Living in a Failed State by George Packer, The Atlantic, June 2020

In somewhat the same vein, Ezra Klein at Vox argues why our governments have become incompetent, well-manifested by our inability to ramp up production of medical equipment. The provocative part of the story is blaming not only the Right wanting government to do nothing, but also the Left worried the government will work to injure the relatively powerless.

The institutions through which Americans build have become biased against action rather than toward it. They’ve become, in political scientist Francis Fukuyama’s term, “vetocracies,” in which too many actors have veto rights over what gets built. That’s true in the federal government. It’s true in state and local governments. It’s even true in the private sector.

Why we can’t build by Ezra Klein

California’s meandering High Speed Rail plan that purports to link San Francisco and Los Angeles gets its due mention.

The empty shelves and government lies remind Emily Gioielli and Leslie Waters at Slate of Eastern Europe 1980, and the danger, especially to our Ruling Party, is that like the faltering dinosaurs of the Warsaw Pact, they broke the social contract made by the paternalist autocrats and the passive citizensof adequate material goods. This seems a little far-fetched to me, but we can never have too much citation of Vaclav Havel.

“Human beings are compelled to live within a lie,” he explained in his treatise, “The Power of the Powerless,” and mimic the meaningless platitudes of state leaders. He explained that the average person went along with this system because they “surrender[ed] higher values when faced with the trivializing temptations of modern civilization.” He further suggested that Eastern Europe should serve as a “warning to the West, revealing its own latent tendencies.”

Is America Becoming Eastern Europe by Emily Gioielli and Leslie Waters

And for a day-by-day analysis of how Xi Jinping and Donald Trump imitated each other in using denial and muzzling the press to squander valuable time to prevent disease, The New Republic has them on the cover, with an article by Laurie Garrett, a journalist of epidemics.

Both Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping instinctively sought to repress news of the true danger of their countries’ outbreaks, and the reach of their infection zones, so as to minimize potential political damage to their regimes. Both leaders, displaying parallel if historically distinct brands of authoritarian rule in a crisis, sought to dismiss the counsel of suspect health professionals and other experts. … The larger political story of the 2020 coronavirus crisis, in other words, may well prove to be a powerful case study in the way that governments controlled by leaders prone to unilateral decision-making, and the top-down information regimes they rely on to perpetuate their rule, are all but guaranteed to create maximum conditions of public health breakdown.

Grim Reapers by Laurie Garrett, The New Republic May 2020 [possible paywalled; audioversion also available]

Action item from National Indivisible

This week is critical because it may be our last chance to demand that Congress ensure relief to every person in this country, regardless of tax or immigration status, age, or disability. 

Here’s the solution: demand your representatives pledge to vote ‘no’ on the next coronavirus package unless it prioritizes the People First Agenda

The package must include these four policies:

  • Keep people on payrolls: Stop mass layoffs, and preserve employment relationships for all businesses, including small businesses. Ensure federal dollars go to workers and small businesses, not enriching CEOs and Wall Street.
  • Provide financial relief: Expand aid for the most vulnerable in the COVID-19 epidemic, including direct cash assistance, increased food aid, debt relief, and eviction protections.
  • Protect public health: Guarantee full health coverage for all COVID-19 care and protections for all frontline workers.
  • Defend elections: Enact a vote-by-mail requirement for 2020 federal elections while maintaining access to in-person voting for those who do not have access to mail voting.

If it doesn’t, representatives must vote no.