Organizers in AZ brace for impacts of a far-right government
The considerable shift to the right locally showed many that the work to attain civil rights is far from over.
Over the past several months, Claudia Kline’s advocacy has taken on the form of knocking doors, registering voters, and educating neighbors about local ballot measures. Kline, who uses they/them pronouns, has been doing this kind of work since even before being able to vote, themself.
Now an electoral campaign manager for Our Voice Our Vote, Kline is just one of thousands of queer Arizonans who have been on the ground before and throughout this past election cycle and bracing for the impact of a GOP-led local government that has, until now, experienced declines in leadership.
That party has also openly embraced authoritarian-style leadership on the campaign trail with endorsing Trump as their leader of choice, giving reason for organizers to believe that local policies that restrict trans rights, deny equal access to housing, or make it harder to live and work here legally might mirror what happens at the federal level.
With all those factors, people like Kline are contemplating what their next steps will be.
“Elections have never been a finish line,” they told LOOKOUT. “They’re a check-in with your community……..