thank you for having me, rachel. it s great to be here. what do you think of that context from electoral politics and moveon to the abortion rights fight. these have been seen as two totally different sectors of lefty politics. but do you represent some sort of crossover? well, i hope so. i mean, first of all, it was great to hear such a thorough history of my institutional alma mater. i haven t heard it in a long time. look, moveon was founded on some very basic principles that couldn t be more applicable right now to women s empowerment and choice movements. one was that politics is often slow to catch up to where the cultural heartbeat is, right? and we re seeing that now. wall street journal poll on the roe anniversary showed seven in ten americans support upholding roe. we have actually successfully mainstreamed choice into our culture. politics is slow to catch up. and moveon knew that. so one of the reasons that moveon has always been successful is by finding innovative
and we re seeing that now. wall street journal poll on the roe anniversary showed seven in ten americans support upholding roe. we have actually successfully mainstreamed choice into our culture. politics is slow to catch up. and moveon knew that. so one of the reasons that moveon has always been successful is by finding innovative ways to use technology to surface the breadth of support for these mainstream ideas. nothing is more mainstream right now than the idea that women should have the freedom to write their own destinies. and foundational to that freedom is our ability to choose when and how and with whom we have a family. when women can do that, we can dream big dreams. we can contribute to culture, business, government, and then countries function better, business, marketplaces function better, and families and communities function better. and i hope that i can bring the tools and the organizing from moveon to bring millions and millions of women s voices into this debate ab