Politics

Michelle Obama urges Voters to Stay Engaged in Anxious Times: “Our democracy is fading”

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Michelle Obama urged Americans not to tune out of the nation’s stalemate political system on Monday, saying that voting — and recruiting millions of new voters — is the only way to bring about change in a deeply polarized nation.
“Protecting and expanding our democracy is the best and only path out of this mess,” the former first lady said during her keynote address at the Los Angeles summit of a national voting organization she helped create.

“Our democracy is fading,” Obama said, citing what she described as abusive gerrymandering practices and a new wave of voting restrictions in states that could suppress voting.

“Sometimes it’s just easier to look away,” Obama said, referring to domestic conflicts and controversies, including disinformation on social media, pervasive gun violence, and the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol.

“No one has the luxury to sit out or stay at home just because you’re not feeling excited enough,” she said. “If you don’t vote, other people will.”

(Photo by David Crane, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)

When We All Vote’s inaugural Culture of Democracy Summit came to a close with her address. The event, which drew a small crowd, was staged at a soccer stadium near downtown Los Angeles, as per Fox News.

It happened as the second day of hearings in Washington were held by a House committee examining the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

When We All Vote was founded by Obama in 2018 to assist in the registration of eligible voters in the United States.
The Democratic Party is facing a difficult political year across the country. The party in power in the White House is usually punished in midterm elections, and President Joe Biden is unpopular with the majority of Americans.

In 2020, when the presidency was on the line, Obama stated that record numbers of people voted. However, voter turnout was low in California’s primary election last week.

“I want to implore every American who cares about our democracy not to just get angry or dejected. I want you to get active,” she said. “We’ve got to change the way we think about our democracy. And we’ve got to change the way we participate in it. Not just every two or four years, but as a routine part of the way we all live.”

“Every voice counts, and every vote matters,” she said.

It was Obama’s first public appearance in front of a larger audience since the outbreak began, according to organizers. She spoke to When We All Vote in person for the first time in 2018 before the midterm elections.

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