Some books about the Trump White House can be faulted on several fronts. But the latest comes from Bob Woodward, a highly experienced journalist whose聽track record means its contents are harder to dismiss.
Last night, I voted in the Massachusetts primary. It鈥檚 always engaging, though most fun when there鈥檚 a waiting line of chattering voters. Last night, in my town, there wasn鈥檛. And that generated a running commentary from my visiting son, who has lived for years in countries where voting is difficult, dangerous, or just not possible. How, he asked as we voted, can people claim they care about how they鈥檙e governed, demand their views be taken seriously, and not bother to vote?
The United States trails its peers, 26th out of 32 industrialized nations in participation. It鈥檚 not for lack of exhortations. Jesse Jackson raised the problem at Aretha Franklin鈥檚 recent funeral: 鈥淲e have long lines to celebrate death, and short lines for voting,鈥 he admonished the audience.
Some point to structural barriers, or doubt a vote can change anything. Yet in Massachusetts, Ayanna Pressley trounced a 10-term incumbent of the Seventh Congressional District in the Democratic primary, a major upset that positions her to become the first African-American woman to represent the state in the US House (no Republican is running).
Why? Her supporters showed up.
One of them was college student Elisabeth Bastien. When a volunteer heard she was casting her first vote, she announced it excitedly to the polling station. Everyone clapped. Ms. Bastien loved the experience, from seeing candidates to hearing voters opine: 鈥淚t鈥檚 cool to feel part of a group that can implement change.鈥
Now to our stories for today, including a deeper look at the challenges of getting voters to the polls in poor and underserved communities, and a bright spot in war-torn South Sudan: girls and the sport of boruboru.