by Kimberly Foster//
After 2016, I thought I was done with politics. But in these two years, we’ve seen so much policy that harms marginalized people being pushed and passed across the country, that I realized sitting out of this system is not an option. The people who hold the most power are only going to make things worse.
And once I got educated on the work that Republicans have been doing to keep voters of color, young people and poor people from the polls, I got even more fired up. Now, I’m all in. I think November 6 is going to be a good day for Democrats across the country, and I will be heartbroken if my favorites lose.
Stacey Abrams is one of the people I’m really pulling for. Though I have to admit that I wasn’t immediately on the Abrams train because I didn’t think she had a chance. I was wrong. And as I’ve learned more about her, the work she’s done to expand the electorate in Georgia, and her political skills, I’ve gotten more invested.
I’ll shed a tear if the outcome isn’t the one I’d prefer on Tuesday.
Abrams victory in the primary could not happen if she weren’t an exceptionally talented woman. Her being tied with a Republican in what used to be the heart of the Confederacy is the product of Herculean effort. I am as amazed by her abilities as I am disgusted by the attempts to minimize her. I know it doesn’t make sense to keep riled up by Trump’s bigotry, but I can’t help it.
This week he said to the press, “I like Oprah, but the woman that she’s supporting is not qualified to be the governor of Georgia by any stretch of the imagination.”
He is, of course, talking about Abrams.
Was Ben Carson qualified to run HUD? Was Rex Tillerson qualified to be Secretary of State? Was Rick Perry qualified to lead the Department of Energy? What are Jared Kushner’s credentials to be making Middle East policy? There’s a report out saying Trump offered the job of UN Ambassador to a woman whose previous occupation was Fox News host. I could go on.
Why is it that the only time he’s talking about credentials and qualifications is when he’s talking about people of color? Curio couldn’t be a competent judge because he’s Mexican, and Trump has a history of calling Black people stupid. It never sticks, but it’s downright laughable when aimed at the woman poised to claim the governorship in a state once thought to be solidly red.
In Florida there is a choice between a Harvard/Yale educated man named @RonDeSantisFL who has been a great Congressman and will be a great Governor – and a Dem who is a thief and who is Mayor of poorly run Tallahassee, said to be one of the most corrupt cities in the Country!— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 29, 2018
A Yale education is a boon for DeSantis, the man racists think is racist. But you know who else went to Yale? Stacey Abrams. She graduated from the same law school as Brett Kavanaugh. Her opponent has no terminal degree.
Mike Pence, obviously threatened by the flood of attention that comes with an endorsement from one of the most famous women in the world responded at a Kemp rally.
“I heard Oprah was in town today. And I heard Will Ferrell was going door-to-door the other day. Well I’d like to remind Stacey and Oprah and Will Ferrell — I’m kind of a big deal, too. And I’ve got a message for all of Stacey Abrams’s liberal Hollywood friends: This ain’t Hollywood. This is Georgia.”

Donald Trump could not have been happier to praise a MAGA-hatted Kanye West and welcome him into the White House. The Trump who spent 30 years getting as close to famous people we like as possible wishes he was one of them. Celebrity is frivolous to these people now because celebrities can’t stand them.
Kimberly Foster is the founder and editor-in-chief of For Harriet.
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