First, some exposition

In 2016โ€ฆ

I did a lot of volunteering for the Hillary campaign. I knocked on doors, made calls, gave money. But in reality, I wasnโ€™t doing it because I was excited about Hillary (I liked her all right). My primary motivation was fear.

So when Trump won, it hit me with a solid sense of despair. And upon reflection, if Hillary had won, I donโ€™t think I would been like โ€œHell yeah! Iโ€™m pumped for the next 4 years!โ€ I think my main emotion would have been relief, and probably some joy at watching Trump crawl back into his golden cave.

All said and done, it was a pretty rotten experience.

But 2018โ€ฆ

Was totally different. In 2018, I followed my mighty activist-maven wife into the service of the Andy Kim congressional campaign in a district near ours. And that was a blast. I donโ€™t think I even knew who he was running against, but I liked Andy Kim, and I loved getting out there trying to take back the House of Congress. And he won.

So here we are, approaching the 2020 election.

First off, Iโ€™m doing stuff. No way Iโ€™m sitting this out. My feeling โ€“ youโ€™re only allowed to have an opinion about politics if you participate in the process. Watching MSNBC and Fox News is not participating in your democracy. Sharing a meme does not make you an activist. If youโ€™re not out there putting in real time and real money, then you deserve whatever elected official you get. In fact, my New Yearโ€™s Resolution for 2020 is really get at it for this election.

However, for my own well-being, I didnโ€™t want to go out there with the primary motivation of getting rid of Trump. I wanted to be for someone. I wanted to be excited about the potential of someone being President.

And I liked my options. I liked Harris, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Bullock, Castroโ€ฆlots of really smart people who I felt like I could get behind. I think of an election as a job opening where Iโ€™m the hiring manager. This felt like a lot of highly qualified candidates.

But I hadnโ€™t really made a pick. I guess I was hanging back, ready to really go at it when it became clear who the winner was going to be.

But then I went for a walk with Alex.

Alex is in โ€œModel U.N.โ€ where kids represent different countries and debate political issues. This year their issue is climate change, and quite reasonably, itโ€™s scaring the shit out of the boy as he learns more about it. So we were talking about that.

EXT. SUBURBAN STREET โ€“ DAY

ALEX, a 14-year old boy, walks with his father, MIKE.

MIKE
(using his “patronizing dad” voice)

Well, youโ€™re not powerless, Alex. In fact, a big way that you can affect the issue of climate change is to participate in who the next President is.

 

ALEX

Oh, I like Warren.

 

MIKE

I’m glad you are aware of the candidates. Elizabeth Warren is a strong option for sure.

 

ALEX

She has a plan to try and get to 100% renewable energy and reduce carbon emissions by 70%.

 

MIKE

She does?

 

ALEX

I also like her Green Apollo plan where she wants to invest $400 billion dollars over the next ten years into clean energy research โ€“ so that will help the economy at the same time.

 

MIKE

Right.

(As he talks, the tone Mikeโ€™s voice slowly changes. And as Alex talks, one would swear that his voice takes on a tone that sounds just the slightest bitโ€ฆpatronizing.)

 

ALEX

Plus the Blue New Deal she has for cleaning up the ocean is good too. Not to mention that offshore wind power can make 4 times the amount of energy that our whole grid uses today. Most people donโ€™t know that.

OK, so as Alex went on explaining the finer points of Warrenโ€™s policies, a lightbulb went off.

  • How cool would it be to do all this election stuff with Alex?

It was followed by a series of supporting light bulbs.

  • Doing this with Alex would motivate me to do it even more. Like a gym buddy.
  • Alex would be an animal on the phone
  • Bringing in Alex would get me a TON of brownie points with my hyper-activist wife

And thatโ€™s how I landed on Warren. Alex.

So the next week, we went to a campaign event in town to make calls to Iowa voters, and I was right: Alex was awesome at it.

Phonebanking is basically getting hung up on 19 out of 20 times. But when people hear a kid on the phone, thatโ€™s quite a hook. Hearing Alex read the Warren script in his cute mid-puberty voice โ€“ people stayed on the line with himโ€ฆI guess to be patronizingโ€ฆbut, whatever. He was a force.

Weโ€™re in for Warren. Weโ€™re actually planning to host an event in the next couple of weeks, so Iโ€™ll keep you posted.

Final note: Iโ€™m gonna be a little bit of a dick about comments on these posts. Not really into hosting a political snipe fest. However, comments about what a great father I am are always welcome.

3 responses to “Stumping for Warren (How Alex won my vote)”

  1. Marie De Francesco Avatar
    Marie De Francesco

    You are without a doubt a fantastic father and a wonderful human being. (And I am not at all prejudiced.๐Ÿ˜Š) Alex is amazing. Some of the credit for his amazingness must go to you, but not all of it. No political sniping here โ€” just applause.

  2. Judy SMITH Avatar
    Judy SMITH

    Go Alex!!

    Judy Smith
    Sent from my iPhone

  3. Eileen Avatar
    Eileen

    You are a great father. Really, you ARE a great father. In addition, you have some excellent material to work with here.

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