Tuesday, August 31, 2021

SB 1 is headed to Governor Abbott’s desk.

Voter suppression has passed in Texas. But this isn't the time to give up or give in.

Dear Jason,

Voter suppression has passed in Texas.

A moment ago, both houses of the state legislature passed the final version of SB 1, the bill designed to subvert democracy and keep hundreds of thousands of Texans from participating in our elections.

I want to be very candid about what this means for our democracy now that the bill is on its way to Governor Abbott's desk.

Once signed, we'll have three months before this law goes into effect, meaning if Congress and President Biden don't move quickly to pass voting rights legislation that would override this bill, Republicans will be allowed to cement their power in Texas while skirting accountability for this state's 57,000 COVID deaths, the power grid failures that have killed over 700 Texans, our place as the most uninsured state in the nation, and a slew of other failures that continue to threaten our health, safety, and livelihoods.

As we confront this new phase of the fight to save voting rights in Texas, please consider chipping in $10 or whatever you can to support Powered by People's work to push Congress and President Biden to pass voting protections that can save our democracy and restore our ability to elect leaders who truly represent the people of this state.

Contribute $10

Here's what gives me hope that we can get this done:

In the effort to stop this voter suppression bill, Texans have shown the nation the level of courage and tenacity that it's going to take to stop this slide and save our democracy before it's too late. Because of the support of people like you, we've been able to hold some of the largest voting rights rallies that this state has seen in decades, engage the conscience of the nation, lead the democratic response to the authoritarian threat prompted by the Big Lie, and take this fight to the one place it can be won: our nation's capital.

And while we push at the federal level, Powered by People will continue to spend every day working to register new voters, host phone banks and in-person canvasses in Texas counties that are often neglected, and do everything we can to bring more people into our democracy so that we can build a better, more responsive government in this state.

We won't be able to win this fight without people like you. By joining this effort and making a donation to Powered by People, you'll help us continue to give this fight everything we've got.

Always grateful to be in this fight with you,

Beto




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Monday, August 30, 2021

Thanks for being a part of this fight

No matter what stunts Republicans try to pull, we will not give in or give up.

Powered By People

Jason,

Last week, the Texas House passed voter suppression bill SB 1, meaning the bill is likely only days away from being signed into law by Governor Abbott.

The passage of this bill reaffirms what many of us have known for a long time: Republican leaders in this state would rather dismantle our democracy than be held accountable for the more than 56,000 COVID deaths that have taken place on their watch, our crumbling power grid that killed over 700 Texans during the winter storm, and so many other examples of their failed leadership.

But thanks to people like you, Powered by People has been able to push back and build a movement focused on electing leaders that truly represent the people of Texas. Every single day, our volunteers are registering new voters and encouraging others in their communities to become Volunteer Deputy Registrars so that they can do the same. We know that registering voters is crucial to bringing more people into our democracy so that we can build a better, more responsive government, and we wouldn't be able to do this work without the support of people like you.

So if you can, please consider chipping in $10 or more now to help us keep up the fight for voting rights in Texas and nationwide.

Contribute $10

Meeting this threat to our democracy will require pushing back on all fronts — both here in Texas and in Washington, DC, where our federal lawmakers have the power to pass voting rights legislation that would override voter suppression laws like SB 1 in Texas and across the country.

The U.S. House of Representatives has passed two critical bills — the For the People Act and John Lewis Voting Rights Act — which have the potential to stop voter suppression and save our democracy. But currently, both bills face an uncertain future thanks to the Senate filibuster.

Powered by People has been doing the necessary work to bring thousands upon thousands of people together to take to the streets, rally in front of the state capitol, and keep the pressure up on President Biden to do everything in his power to reform the filibuster to allow voting rights legislation to pass. We will only be able to get this done if we bring enough people together to call on President Biden to take action.

Jason, your support allows Powered by People to continue fighting for our democracy on all fronts. Please, donate $10 or more to support our work to register new voters, fight against voter suppression, and protect our democracy.

Thank you for your support,

Kate Roberts
Powered by People




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Sunday, August 29, 2021

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Friday, August 27, 2021

SB 1 just passed

Dear Jason,

The Texas House just passed voter suppression bill SB 1, which, combined with the poll closures, voter ID laws and racial gerrymandering of our state over the last eight years, comprises the greatest attack on voting rights in modern Texas history. At this point, the bill is all but certain to head to Governor Abbott's desk soon, where he will sign it into law.

There's a way forward from here, but first, it's important that we thank everyone who has fought the good fight so far. Everyone who has marched, rallied, called their state legislators, and spent hours upon hours at the state capitol trying to stop this bill — you are my heroes. After today's vote, many of you may be doubting whether all of that effort made a difference, but I want to make clear that it did.

That courageous work on the part of everyday Texans forced Republican lawmakers to walk back some of its worst provisions, brought national attention to the fight for democracy in Texas, and gave our Democratic legislators the support they needed to break quorum and fight this fight. And most importantly, it pushed Congress to make progress on the For the People Act and John Lewis Voting Rights Act, which would override the SB 1 voter suppression bill, unrig our elections, and help us build a true multiracial democracy in America.

This isn't the time to give up or give in.

Now that this bill has passed in Texas, we must direct our resources toward pushing President Biden to do everything in his power to reform the filibuster and pass voting rights legislation. Please take a moment to write or email him and urge him to use the full force of his office to get this done.

These federal bills could save voting rights in America, but only if all of us do all we can to get them passed and signed into law.

Much like the 1965 Voting Rights Act depended on millions of Americans to push President Lyndon Johnson to use the extraordinary power of his office to get it passed, today's voting rights bills call upon you and me to do our part to push President Biden to do the same. So please, contact President Biden and urge him to give this fight everything he's got.

I know we can do it.

Keep the faith,

Beto




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Tuesday, August 24, 2021

An update from Powered by People

Take a look at some of our amazing volunteers doing this good work across Texas!

Powered By People

Jason,

The 2022 election may be over a year away, but the fight for voting rights can't afford to take a break.

That's why Beto and Powered by People volunteers have been working non-stop to register new voters, advocate on behalf of voting rights legislation, and more!

Just take a look at some of our amazing volunteers doing this good work from Laredo...

A Powered by People volunteer standing next to a newly registered voter

To Houston…

A Powered by People volunteer wearing a mask and holding a clipboard with voter registration forms

To San Antonio…

Four masked Powered by People volunteers standing behind a table with voter registration forms

To Dallas…

A masked Powered by People volunteer standing next to a person filling out their voter registration form

To El Paso…

Beto wearing a mask and baseball hat, helping an unregistered voter fill out their voter registration form on a clipboard

And all across Texas!

10 Powered by People volunteers standing behind a table, holding clipboards and voter registration forms.

Can you make a $10 or more donation today to support Powered by People's work to protect voting rights, register new voters, and elect leaders who care about Texans?

Contribute $10

Jason, Beto and the Powered by People team have been working hard to expand and protect the rights of Texans all year. In June, Beto toured Texas to push the federal government to pass the For the People Act, which would roll back voter suppression efforts in Texas and across the country. And when Texas House Democrats broke quorum and flew to Washington, D.C., this team raised over $730,000 to help them stay the course. Not to mention, the four-day voting rights march from Georgetown to Austin that Powered by People helped organize.

It's plain and simple. While Powered by People is trying to build an inclusive democracy, Texas Republicans are trying to take away Texans' votes. Defeating bad actors in Texas isn't going to be easy — it will take a multi-year effort centered around community organizing and voter registration.

That's why Powered by People is doing the work now, with just over a year to go until the next statewide election. We're going to fight for our democracy with everything we've got. If you're ready to be a part of this movement, will you make a donation of $10 or more right now?

Thank you for your support,

Powered by People




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Friday, August 20, 2021

An update on quorum

Dear Jason,

When Texas House Democrats broke quorum last month to take the fight for voting rights to Washington, DC, they made us proud, and did more than we ever could have asked of them. They left behind their homes, their families and their businesses to stall Republican efforts to pass voter suppression legislation and dismantle our democracy.

As the minority in the state legislature, we always knew that the Texas Democrats couldn't hold the line forever, and that the purpose of their quorum break was to buy us time to pass federal voting rights legislation. Yesterday, we learned that the Texas House regained quorum, meaning it's time for Congress and President Biden to finish the job and do their part to save our democracy.

So please join me in contacting the White House to urge President Biden to reform the filibuster and pass federal voting protections. It's the only way to stop Republican leadership in Texas from passing voter suppression legislation and messing with our elections.

The good thing is this: because of what Texas Democrats accomplished during their quorum break in Washington, DC, Congress is moving in the right direction. The Senate Majority Leader has promised to take up the For the People Act as the "first order of legislative business" when senators return from recess in mid-September. And next week, the House is set to pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Act, which would complement the For the People Act by fully restoring the 1965 Voting Rights Act that the Supreme Court has gutted over the past decade.

But I want to be clear. There is no path forward for either piece of legislation unless the Senate reforms the filibuster. And that will not happen unless President Biden puts the full power of the presidency behind pushing Democratic senators to do so.

With that in mind, please contact President Biden. Push him to use the full force of his office to reform the filibuster and pass the For the People Act and John Lewis Voting Rights Act. While writing to the President is only part of what it will take to move him to act, it's an important first step. There is no way to win this fight without him, and it's going to be up to all of us to push him to get it done.

Thanks for taking part in this fight,

Beto




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Thursday, August 12, 2021

I want to be honest with you.

Dear Jason,

Over the past week, a lot has happened in the fight to protect voting rights — both here in Texas and in Washington, DC. I'll go into more detail below, but here's the topline summary:

  • In Texas, Governor Abbott called a second special session to force through yet another voter suppression bill, SB 1, which could effectively disenfranchise hundreds of thousands of our fellow Texans. The special session started on Saturday. The Senate passed the bill out of committee on Monday and then passed it on a final vote just hours ago.
  • In DC, the US Senate just missed a crucial deadline to pass the For the People Act. Senate Majority Leader Schumer held a vote on the bill early yesterday morning, but Republicans blocked it and senators went home for a month-long recess. Since redistricting data comes out today, that means we won't have federal protection in place before state legislatures redraw congressional and state legislative districts. This means it's going to be really hard to stop the GOP from gerrymandering their way into greater power in 2022.

If we're honest with ourselves, we have to admit that, despite our best efforts, our democracy is in an even more precarious place than it was a month ago when President Joe Biden gave his Philadelphia voting rights speech. And we're very close to reaching a point of no return.

Collectively, we have made thousands upon thousands of phone calls to President Biden and the US Senate, pleading with them to treat this threat to our democracy with the sense of urgency it demands. Yet democracy legislation took a backseat to the infrastructure package, and we now face an uphill battle to stop gerrymandering before Republicans unfairly and undemocratically lock themselves into a majority for the next decade.

It might feel difficult to see the light at the end of the tunnel. But I want to be just as honest about our next steps as I am about our current position: If we respond to these developments with action and not despair, it is still possible to stop voter suppression in Texas, pass federal voting rights legislation, and unrig our elections so that we have something approaching a true multiracial democracy in America.

It's just going to be really hard.

This moment wasn't made for the faint of heart. Luckily, we aren't built that way. As President Truman said, "America was not built on fear. America was built on courage, on imagination and an unbeatable determination to do the job at hand."

So let's get after it.

Let's start with the Texas voter suppression bill:

The unfortunate reality is that in the long-term, there is no realistic way to avoid the passage of voter suppression legislation in Texas unless the US Senate passes federal voting rights legislation. Texas Senate Democrats are outnumbered by Republicans 18 to 13, and their House colleagues are outnumbered 83 to 67.

But let's also recognize what we have to be optimistic about. First, the courageous House Democrats who broke quorum twice to block anti-democracy bills have yet to return to the state capitol in large enough numbers to reestablish quorum. While we don't know how long the quorum break will last, the House Democrats have bought us a lot of valuable time.

During this critical period, we cannot let up the pressure on our state legislators. Keep calling your state representative and state senator. Keep marching, keep rallying, and keep showing up at the state capitol to testify at voter suppression hearings every time they come up. That's what is giving Texas Democrats the power and leverage they need to hold the line as long as possible.

That public pressure is also what has forced Republicans to walk back on some of the most heinous aspects of this bill, like their proposed ban on "Souls to the Polls" and a provision that would have made it easier for them to overturn democratically-decided elections just because they don't like the outcome. Because thousands of Texans from across the state have rallied in front of the Texas Capitol and spent hours upon hours testifying against these bills in the House and Senate, we've been able to keep the worst from happening.

Now on to the fight for the For the People Act:

Because the US Senate failed to pass the For the People Act before the release of the 2020 census data, starting today GOP-led legislatures in states like Texas, Georgia, and Florida will begin some of the most aggressive gerrymandering campaigns in modern US history.

That's because several Supreme Court rulings in 2013 and 2019 weakened federal oversight of state redistricting, so this is the first year in over half a century that states will redraw district boundaries knowing the US Department of Justice has limited recourse to reverse gerrymandered maps.

While we missed this critical deadline, it is still possible for the voting rights bill of our generation, the For the People Act, to pass. But it absolutely will not happen unless Democrats in the Senate unify around reforming the filibuster.

Senate Republicans made that clear yesterday when they blocked voting rights legislation for a second time. After taking a vote on the For the People Act, Senate Majority Leader Schumer introduced two smaller, much narrower bills: one that would prevent partisan gerrymandering and one that would help get dark money out of our politics. Since Republicans blocked those as well, Senators Manchin and Sinema — as well as any other Democrat who has opposed filibuster reform up to this point — now have all the evidence they need that Republicans have zero plans to act in a bipartisan manner on voting rights.

This is the time to ramp up your outreach to your federal lawmakers — but if you're only going to contact one person, make sure it's President Biden. While we know he supports the For the People Act, and that he understands the gravity of today's threat to democracy, he has yet to put the full power of the presidency behind reforming the filibuster to allow the For the People Act to pass.

Senator Schumer has vowed to make the For the People Act the Senate's "first order of business" when senators return from recess in mid-September. That's a really good sign, but it won't mean anything unless President Biden makes reforming the filibuster his absolute number one priority.

Here's what I'm asking you to do:

  1. Call your Texas representatives. Write them letters. Show up at their offices. It doesn't matter, just make sure they hear from you. Find the contact for your state representatives here. Tell them you don't want them messing with our elections or restricting the right to vote.
  2. Contact President Biden. Contact him every day until he calls on the Senate to reform the filibuster, and even after that — until Congress passes the For the People Act and he signs it into law. You can find the White House contact information here.
  3. Be physically present in this fight. Democracy and voting rights organizations are holding events nearly every day across the country to keep the national spotlight on the fight to save our democracy. Join one.

And most importantly, keep the faith. We can win, but we must believe we can win and then take the steps to realize that belief. Faith without works is dead. And we are very much alive in this fight.

Thank you for constantly renewing my faith by the good work you're doing. Keep it up.

Beto




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Wednesday, August 11, 2021

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Friday, August 6, 2021

56 years ago

Dear Jason,

On this day 56 years ago, President Lyndon Baines Johnson signed the 1965 Voting Rights Act into law, expanding the right to vote to tens of millions of disenfranchised Americans and setting our country on a path toward establishing its first true multiracial democracy.

That momentous win for democracy and voting rights happened because people protested, sacrificed, and put their lives on the line to engage the conscience of the nation, and because President Johnson was willing to use the full force of his office to pass federal voting rights legislation.

Today, as we face a weakened Voting Rights Act, and as state legislatures across the country erect new barriers to the ballot box, it's going to take another historic movement and strong leadership from President Biden to pass new federal voting rights legislation and save our democracy before it's too late.

I have shared below an op-ed I authored for CNN that expresses my hope that President Biden will rise to the occasion to pass the For the People Act — and why I believe Texas will be central to the fight to save our democracy.

You can also find the op-ed here.

I hope you'll take a few minutes to read it,

Beto

 

***

There have been three critical moments where Texas has proved decisive for democracy and voting rights in this country. The first two, in 1890 and 1965, afford us key insights into how we can make the most of the third one — taking place right now.

After Reconstruction, states throughout the South were rife with White supremacist terrorism, racial injustice and attacks on Black voting rights — and by the late 19th century, Texas was among the most brutal. Whites-only Democratic clubs and their armed militias had "purified" the ballot box in one Texas county after another. Political violence, assassinations and lynchings enforced White rule throughout much of the state at the expense of Black lives and Black voting rights.

In the Washington County election of 1886, for example, ballot boxes in Black precincts were stolen at gunpoint by agents of a Whites-only political ring known as the "People's Party." When Black poll workers dared to fight back at one of the precincts, they were arrested, and three of them — Shad Felder, Alfred Jones and Stewart Jones — were lynched by a mob. No one was ever brought to justice.

The national outrage this produced compelled Congress to hold hearings on the troubled voting practices that plagued Texas and much of the South. The resulting Federal Elections Bill of 1890 promised greater federal intervention to protect the right to vote in any state where it was threatened.

Like the Democratic Party today, the Republican Party of 1890 had recently won majorities in the US House and Senate, and, with the election of Benjamin Harrison in 1888, controlled the presidency, too. And like today's Democratic Party, those Republicans publicly resolved to use that power to secure voting rights, especially for the Black targets of voter suppression efforts in the South. The Federal Elections Bill duly passed the House of Representatives that year and debate on its passage soon began in the Senate.

But unfortunately for that bill and for millions of Black Americans, the Senate Republicans were unable — or perhaps unwilling — to overcome a filibuster threat led by the Democrats. It didn't help that Harrison, who had campaigned on a platform of restoring voting rights, remained on the sidelines for much of the action.

So, after all the righteous indignation over the election outrage in Texas had been spent, the majority party meekly gave up the fight for voting rights. They blinked in the face of the filibuster and denied America the chance to establish a true multiracial democracy.

In the aftermath, state legislatures throughout the former Confederacy imposed Whites-only primary laws and additional forms of Jim Crow voter suppression, including poll taxes, literacy tests and extraordinary residency requirements (all of which Whites could bypass thanks to the "grandfather clause" that exempted those whose grandfathers had been registered voters).

It took 75 years, a relentless voting rights movement and the first president from Texas to provide another opportunity to reestablish the right to vote in the South. Soon after Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, civil rights leaders like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. pressed President Lyndon B. Johnson to work on an accompanying voting rights bill. After Johnson told activists that he just didn't have the power to move Congress, King resolved to "get the President some power."

Over the following months, civil and voting rights leaders brought the issue to the forefront of the national conversation. Through protests and marches, direct action and extraordinary courage, they successfully engaged the conscience of the country. And when John Lewis was beaten within an inch of his life leading a march from Selma to Montgomery on March 7, 1965, Johnson finally had the power he needed.

Selma to Montgomery march

Just eight days after Bloody Sunday, the President convened a joint session of Congress and told the assembled members that no other issue was as important as securing the country's democracy. "Should we defeat every enemy, should we double our wealth and conquer the stars, and still be unequal to this issue," he said, "then we will have failed as a people and as a nation."

As far as Johnson was concerned, no short-term political interest would compromise the intensity of this fight for the most important of American rights. By using the full power of the presidency, he helped move Congress to pass the Voting Rights Act on August 5, 1965 and signed it into law the next day.

Signing of the Voting Rights Act

As long as the law stood, states would be forced to tear down barriers to the ballot box and guarantee equal voting access to every eligible American.

But it turned out that the law could not stand forever.

When the US Supreme Court stripped critical protections from the Voting Rights Act in its 2013 Shelby County v. Holder decision, Southern legislatures responded in much the same way that they did following the end of Reconstruction and the defeat of the Elections Bill of 1890: they moved to dramatically restrict the ability to vote. This time, voter suppression would come in the form of new voter ID laws, polling place closures and racially gerrymandered districts designed to reduce the voting power of Black and minority voters, the poor, the very young and the very old.

This anti-democratic movement aggressively metastasized following former President Donald Trump's Big Lie about widespread election fraud in the 2020 election. In just the first six months of this year, more than a dozen states enacted new laws to make it easier to restrict access to the ballot box.

In Texas, the Republican-led legislature's voter suppression bill was bad enough for Democratic lawmakers to leave the state for Washington, D.C. in an effort to block its passage and plead for federal action in the form of the For the People Act.

Much like the Federal Elections Bill of 1890, the For the People Act's provisions are commensurate with the scope of the current threat to American democracy. The bill would ensure equal access to early voting and mail-in voting, establish automatic voter registration, make election day a national holiday and end gerrymandering (redistricting used to "draw" people of color out of voting power in states like Texas). In March, the House passed the For the People Act on a party-line vote, just like with the 1890 elections bill.

But the For the People Act has been stopped by the threat of a filibuster in the Senate, in a manner quite similar to the 1890 elections bill. Though Democrats have the power to overcome this procedural vestige of segregation, they have been paralyzed by intra-party disagreements and an unwillingness to take seriously the challenges faced by Black and brown voters. Their inaction risks dooming the bill to failure.

That defeat doesn't have to be America's fate.

Just as civil rights leaders and everyday Americans successfully pushed Johnson to use the power of his office to pass voting rights, we can do the same to push President Joe Biden to make voting rights his number one priority — and to place all of his political capital into urging the Senate to carve out an exception to the filibuster. (Exceptions already exist for federal judges, Supreme Court justices, budget deals and fast-track trade agreements.)

Those Texas Democratic legislators who took the fight to the nation's capital are pushing the President to do just that. Their quorum break, which will end on August 6, exactly 56 years after the signing of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, has bought us some time to save free and fair elections before it's too late.

The question is, what will the President do with it?

Biden is certainly no Harrison, who campaigned for office on a platform of voting rights but then allowed the matter to languish once in office. In fact, Biden gave an extraordinarily powerful speech in Philadelphia earlier this month, describing in the starkest of terms the existential threat our democracy faces. If he follows that up by using the tremendous power of his office to help change the rules of the filibuster to save our democracy, he will stand alongside Johnson as a champion and savior of American democracy.

But he must take to heart the lessons of Texas: when we fight for the right to vote, we can expand democracy to include everyone. But when we give up without a fight, we can lose democracy itself.

Op-Ed in CNN: https://www.cnn.com/2021/07/30/opinions/joe-biden-texas-voting-rights-lesson-orourke/index.html

Photo 1: U.S. Library of Congress
Photo 2: Bettman Archive/Getty Images




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Thursday, August 5, 2021

Thank you, Jason

Jason,

I'm writing to say thank you to everyone who supported the Texas Democratic lawmakers by donating to the fund we set up for them at Powered by People.

More than 18,000 people donated a total of $733,612 to help them stay the course. 100% of the funds raised have been wired to them.

By breaking quorum and taking this fight to the one place it can be won — our nation's capitol — these courageous legislators serve as the inspiration and moral leverage to advance national voting rights legislation. The progress we've seen in the last few weeks has a lot to do with their courage and sacrifice.

I want to make sure you know that they appreciate your help. They've told me that these donations not only ensured that they had the resources to go the distance, but gave them the confidence that the people of Texas (and beyond!) have their backs.

There's still a lot of work to do to make sure that we save this democracy and guarantee the right to vote for every eligible voter in this country, but thanks to these Texas Democrats we've got hope and an example of what it will take to get it done.

Thank you for supporting them.

Beto






 

Tuesday, August 3, 2021

El Paso

Two years ago today a Texas man killed 23 people at a Walmart in El Paso.

In the manifesto he published shortly before the murders he wrote that he'd come to repel the "Hispanic invasion of Texas," language that echoed what former President Donald Trump used to describe immigrants, asylum seekers and refugees.

A USA Today report found that Trump had used the words "predator," "invasion," "alien," "killer," "criminal" and "animal" at his rallies while discussing immigration more than 500 times.

The newly emboldened white supremacy movement, the extraordinarily easy access to powerful firearms (the killer's mother, after discovering that her son had purchased an AK-47, called the Allen, Texas police department asking for help. Unfortunately, it is perfectly legal in Texas to buy a weapon originally designed for war, and so there was nothing they could do for her, or for the 23 people who would be murdered in El Paso), and the constant scapegoating of immigrants by President Trump, Texas Governor Greg Abbott and the modern Republican party made this possible.

And so did everyone who turned a blind eye to what was happening in this country.

It's tempting for some to chalk the El Paso killings up to mental illness, violent video games, or lack of religion (Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick blamed them on all three). That would allow us to "move on," and absolve us of responsibility.

But it should be clear to us that the Walmart shooting is an example of the white supremacist terrorism that is more prevalent in this country today than at any time since the last era of Jim Crow.

We see it in the white, masked gunmen who mass on the steps of state capitols across the country, seeking to intimidate lawmakers and the public; we see it in Klansmen and Nazis chanting "Jews will not replace us" in Charlottesville; we see it in a Michigan militia's attempt to kidnap and execute Governor Gretchen Whitmer; we see it in the insurrectionists carrying Confederate battle flags into the U.S. Capitol on January 6th, where five people including a capitol police officer were killed in an attempt to violently overthrow the 2020 presidential election.

And we see it in the effort to entrench white power in state legislatures across this country at the expense of minority voters through aggressive racial gerrymandering and voter suppression laws.

That's what we're up against today. That's what El Paso was up against on August 3rd, 2019.

And that's what we'll be up against for as long as we accept this as our fate.

But we don't have to. As long as we're willing to acknowledge that it is happening, call it out where we see it, and fight like hell to overcome it, we have a chance to come through.

Here are some things we can do:

Pass legislation that will significantly reduce access to firearms intended for use in war, along with universal background checks and extreme risk protection orders; vigorously pursue prosecution against white supremacist terrorists and those who fund and encourage them; reject all language and policies that seek to dehumanize immigrants; and stop the rollback of voting rights in this country by passing pro-democracy legislation like the For the People Act.

Today, my thoughts are with the survivors from August 3rd, 2019 and the family members who lost a loved one on that day. We can only imagine their grief and the pain that this anniversary brings them.

But to truly honor them, let us devote ourselves to fighting the forces that brought such unspeakable evil and death to our community and that continue to threaten the future of this country.

I hope you will continue to join me in this work.

Beto