ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 10月5日 23時59分


Across the American south, a small army of African-American women are using networks originally forged in segregation to mobilize voters for Democratic candidates in the November elections. They are working in conservative states and districts, hoping to pull off upsets like Doug Jones’s stunning Senate victory last year in Alabama, where 98 percent of black women voted for him and proved a critical base of support. As both parties gear up for what many see as the most consequential midterm elections in memory, black women’s votes will be critical. Exit polls continue to show that they are the single most loyal Democratic voting bloc. There are also hurdles. African-Americans make up a third at most of the electorate in much of the region. Black candidates vying to make history still need white votes to win. We talked to more than 50 black women during a recent voter mobilization bus tour across Georgia, Florida and Mississippi about the South’s past and glimpses of its future. Swipe left to see photos of some of the women, photographed by @audramelton on #nytassignment, and visit the link in our profile to read more about their efforts and hurdles that they face.


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