We have to bring literacy and awareness to this process, Kimora says of the right to vote. If you want to make a change, you have to take advantage of lots of these laws and rights that we have as voters as women voters, as people of color use it or lose it.
Kimora doesn’t agree with everything she said back in 1990, though. At the time, she confessed to preferring McDonald s to French cuisine ( That s horrendous,” she confesses today) and professed that she would never leave her hometown of St. Louis. I said that?! she exclaims. Oh my gosh, no! My whole life is telling everyone to get
This article originally appeared on Capital & Main.
On the Saturday before Thanksgiving, Brandon Brown appeared to have no room in his busy schedule for menu planning. The field director for the New Georgia Project had just come from a voter registration drive, one of a half-dozen planned around the state. He d popped in on a Zoom meeting with about 4,000 volunteers. Soon he would be embarking on a hiring spree.
The organization had set itself an ambitious goal: knocking on 1 million doors before the Jan. 5 U.S. Senate runoff election. And for the task, a small army of foot soldiers would be required. We re looking for anywhere from 200 to 300 canvassers to knock on doors across the state of Georgia, Brown said.