9/27/19 - Starting next year, you'll see celebration galore for the 100th anniversary of the 19th amendment, often celebrated as voting rights for American women. But which women could vote? We talk with historian Lisa Tetrault about the myths of suffrage (spoiler alert: it's not actually a right) and the racist politics of Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
Then we move to the state of suffrage today with activists Arekia Bennett of Mississippi Votes and DeJuana Thompson of Woke Vote, who are working to ensure that marginalized people are enfranchised under new waves of voter suppression.
The Myth of Seneca Falls and other writing by historian Lisa Tetrault
Mississippi Votes is working with youth to expand voter access and civic engagement. Read more from Arekia Bennett in a recent editorial for The Root.
Woke Vote works to train new organizers and mobilize historically disenfranchised voters of color.