fight, making sure that while they re doing the great work in d.c., that we re doing what we need to do in texas to make sure that we win the right to vote for every eligible american. that s the genius of our democracy and we ve got to make sure we fight for it, realize it, and win. that s what we re doing from georgetown to austin, culminating at the state capitol on the 31st of july, 10:00 a.m., austin, texas. we want everyone in the state to stand up and be counted. i have a question for you, when you talk to voters in texas, do you get the sense this feels as timely, as imminent, as it does to you and reverend harris? absolutely. we talk to voters who only voted for the first time in their lives in, say, harris county, because they opened up 24-hour voting. the minimum wage in texas is seven bucks and 25 cents an
every day of the march and at the rally the 31st of july, 10:00 a.m. at the state capitol. reverend, the march is also calling for congress to put in place permanent protections for undocumented immigrants, understanding voting rights, covid, immigration are on the long list of life-changing policies that need to be addressed, talk about the consequences both politically and on a human level if democrats don t get voting rights passed or a pathway to citizenship as soon as possible. what we know is that voting rights and people people largely across this country believe in the expansion of our voting rights. what we know is that a pathway to citizenship, these things are bed rocks of a strong democracy. we live in a nation where there are 140 million people who are poor or just one small emergency away from economic ruin. in texas alone there are 13 million poor and low-income people. so what we see is that the same