How to pronounce "outvoted"
Transcript
María Teresa Kumar: Much has been made of the 2020 US election.
Right now, just over a week later,
pollsters are issuing mea culpas,
Democrats are tentatively celebrating,
Republicans are blowing their collective tops,
lawyers are busier than ever,
ballot-counters are still hard at it,
and demographers are desperately trying to understand
who voted, for whom, where and why.
Much has been said of the Latino vote in this election,
which is something I know a little bit about,
having been working obsessively over it for the last 16 years.
Latinos are the fastest-growing demographic,
with the largest voter registration cap in America.
A Latino youth turns 18 every 30 seconds.
While the mode for whites in America is 58,
the mode for Latinx is 11 years old.
You heard that right.
And it's these new voters
and the youth who are translating America for their immigrant families
who are leading the charge for audacious change.
An estimated 73 percent of Latinx youth voted for Biden.
As members of the largest generation globally,
these Latino youth mirror their peers,
seeking intervention for climate equity,
racial justice
and gender parity.
What we're hearing right now in America and around the globe
is a demand for a massive reset on how we will govern in the 21st century
for a world that is livable,
equitable and just.
Too many young people are drowning in student debt
here in America,
their families have been ravaged by the pandemic,
who have lost jobs, lives and housing,
and still, in 2020, they showed up for an America to believe in.
Many say that 1914, the eve of World War I,
defined the 20th century in America.
That meant FDR's New Deal that doubled down on its citizens
by nation-building,
offering pathways to the middle class
through public works, education and sponsoring artists and musicians,
building roads to provide jobs and sponsoring science-driven blueprints
that allowed a man almost 40 years later
to look up at the Moon and say that he wanted to go there.
And we did that with less technology than the smartphone feeding this talk.
So my hope is that the 21st century
will be remembered as starting February 2020,
not because that was when COVID ravaged us
and in doing so, exposed the real, deep socioeconomic and racial disparities
that ail us,
but because that was when Americans cast a ballot for the future
that believes in addressing the climate crisis,
that health care is a right,
that racial inequities hinder us all.
We have a window to meet the precedent set by the Greatest Generation
and define our century
as one that is equitable and sustained.
I, for one, am excited to get to work.
I hope you'll join me to usher in this audacious change together.
Bianca DeJesus: María Teresa, thank you so much for that.
MTK: Thank you, Bianca. Thank you for this conversation.
BD: It is an honor.
So, some commentators seem to be confounded
that in certain places,
Republicans received meaningful numbers of Latinx votes.
Of course, it's kind of silly to imagine that any demographic is a monolith,
and within our community, there are so many differences.
So what is the most productive way to think about heterogeneity
within the Latinx, and really, within any community?
MTK: If we don't have public elected officials
talking to our community, especially a new community,
that is coming of age,
that is relatively new to the democratic process,
someone else will fill that vacuum.
But I can share with you
one of the things that we knew at Voto Latino
was that young Latinos are navigating America for their families.
Those youth turned up to protect their families,
and it was not just in Arizona,
but we also saw it Nevada, we also saw it in Pennsylvania,
we saw it in Georgia and in North Carolina.
And if you want to have an inclusive America,
you have to fight for the vote,
and that is basically what we need to see right now.
But when we talk to young people,
they voted disproportionately because they wanted climate change,
they wanted access to health care,
and they wanted to talk about the real racial inequities.
When George Floyd sadly was murdered tragically,
Latinos were side by side with the African American community
because we recognize that that is something
that truly plagues our American existence
and that we have to address it if we want to move forward.
BD: Absolutely.
So do you see evidence that patterns change
regarding first- and second- generation Latinx voters,
and how does assimilation play out
in terms of long-term voting trends?
MTK: That's interesting.
So at Voto Latino,
we don't believe that there's an assimilation. Right?
What we want is an enhancement of American culture.
Just like we celebrate St. Patrick's Day,
we want to be able to celebrate our roots
and recognize the importance of that richness.
We are in a very unique moment in America,
where we have the most diverse population in the world,
and one can argue that that is why some people don't want us to succeed,
because it's our human capital,
our vision,
our ability to move forward
and our diversity
that prepares us for this century.
And so when we talk about the differences in the Latino community,
it's also the differences in America
that makes us so much richer
with our imagination,
with our ability to have entrepreneurship,
and we have to use that and harness it for good.
Some people will say race is what is our Achilles' heel.
I actually believe that it's the diversity of our races and our cultures
that actually prepares us to battle the 21st century
that it's already interglobal.
And the more that we harness that beauty of that diversity,
that is what prepares us to compete and define the 21st century.
BD: Wow. Yeah. I think that's beautiful and totally agree.
So how can we make first-time voters repeat voters
who are engaged in future elections
and not just for presidential elections
but for local government as well?
MTK: One of the things that we are seeing
is that we're seeing more young people run for office,
and the more people start running for office,
they realize that local government is what makes the most impact,
at least here in America.
So if you want, for example, some racial reform
in your judicial system,
vote for your district attorney,
vote for your city councilman.
If you think that there's disparities in our education system,
run for your school board.
So that's one.
But the other thing to send very clearly to politicians
is that when young --
Americans voted their heart out.
Young Latinos, youth in general,
outvoted the people before them,
but they're voting on making a bet that their life will change,
because the last four years could not have been rockier.
And if the folks that are elected
don't meet the challenges of addressing climate change,
addressing racial equity and gender parity
and health care for all,
they run the risk of not having those people vote again in 2024,
and we need everybody on deck.
And so our job as citizens
is to ensure that we give the people that we just voted into office
the courage to do the right thing,
and that means to continue the rallies,
continue calling our members of Congress, writing those letters
and running for office ourselves.
BD: So one question that speaks to the theme of this year's TED Women,
"Fearless,"
I think it's accurate to say
that there's been a lot of fear within the Latinx community
over the last few years.
How does that begin to change now?
MTK: I will share with you,
the day after Donald Trump was elected,
all of our worst nightmares came to fruition.
We saw family separation,
one of the cruelest forms of our nation's history
came back to haunt us,
because we've done it before,
and everyone lived in fear.
And the day after Joe Biden's declaration on Saturday,
I can tell that there was a collective --
we've been holding our breath for so long,
there was a collective release of not only that are we going to be OK
but that fellow Americans stood up
as allies
and said, "Not one more."
And so that is what gives me hope,
is that this was a collective America
who outvoted their hearts out,
because we see that in our celebration of our country's future
is believing in democracy,
believing in a transition of power,
believing that the most votes won and the electoral college was on our side,
and more importantly,
that these issues that Trump tried to ascend his presidency
for the second time
that were based on racism,
that were based on the callousness of treating people and women differently,
that they were not going to withstand.
And so we do have to rebuild,
but we have to rebuild not because of the four years of Donald Trump.
If anything, I think he just exposed a lot of our fractures.
We have to rebuild based on the last, I would say, 20 years.
But the great thing is that the voters are here for it,
and young people are here for it.
I don't have to change a young person's mind
that we are in a climate crisis.
They get it.
Cultural change is the hardest to do,
but we have generations there with us,
because they're there and they get it.
BD: (Exhales) That's a relief.
So, you yourself have been fearlessly outspoken.
What drives you forward personally?
MTK: I deeply -- I don't know if I've been fearless --
I deeply believe in our country,
and I deeply believe in us,
and I deeply believe that when we are present,
there's nothing we can't do.
And when I say that, we ...
As a generation, we will not have an opportunity
to reimagine what our country looks like,
our systems of governments look like,
and there will be people --
you know, my children are six and eight,
who will ask me 15 years from now, "What did you do?"
And I want to say that I was alongside allies and the American people
to rebuild better
and to reimagine better.
And we have always been a country of entrepreneurship,
design and imagination,
and what a perfect place to start
when the majority of Americans are with us.
BD: Absolutely.
Well, thank you so, so much, María Teresa.
MTK: Thank you.
Phonetic Breakdown of "outvoted"
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