Jan 2, 2025
How Young Dems Can Fight Back Against Second Trump Reign
How Young Dems Can Fight Back Against Second Trump Reign
- 13 minutes
Welcome to the bullpen.
All right.
In the bullpen today,
we have Mr. Parker Short, former president
of the Georgia Young Democrats,
a group I was a member of many years ago.
[00:00:17]
I'm a little too old
for the Young Democrats today.
I aged out, but, brother,
good to have you on the program.
You have an undergraduate degree in public
policy from the University of Michigan.
You're working on a masters
of Public Policy at Duke.
[00:00:33]
You've also served as a DNC delegate,
2000, Georgia zero four,
lifelong DeKalb resident, one of the most
progressive counties, in the world.
Really?
Definitely in the state of Georgia,
list goes on and on.
So what in the hell are Young Dems
and progressives going to do
[00:00:50]
under this Trump administration?
That's why I have you on the show.
So good day to you.
Well, thank you for having me, Doctor
Richie, it's really an honor to be here.
And God, it really is startling. We lost.
But, you know, we've been here before, and
for me, it's the same as it was before.
It starts locally, you know,
young Democrats have so much power
[00:01:08]
in their own communities.
And you talk about DeKalb County
being so progressive.
I am so proud of DeKalb County
because just a month after we lost
the election and Kamala Harris lost,
we elected an extremely progressive,
amazing candidate, doctor Ladina Bolton,
to represent half the county
in Super District seven.
[00:01:24]
She was Working Families Party endorsed.
I worked with her in DeKalb County,
Young Democrats years ago,
and it's about building community power,
investing in a bench,
making sure that we have local candidates
that are fighting for progressive issues
in your county commission, in your city
council, and in your state legislature.
[00:01:40]
One thing that Republicans have done well
is after Obama got elected, they focused
on flipping state legislative seats.
Democrats have gotten wiped out in
Georgia, were only ten seats away
from flipping the state legislature.
For us, that can mean restoring
abortion rights, expanding Medicaid,
giving 600,000 people health care,
investing in Georgia schools.
[00:01:58]
So it starts locally.
It starts in our own state.
We're going to continue
the battle against Trump.
But it starts by talking to your
own neighbors, electing local candidates.
And if we all do that all over the
country, we're going to build a movement
that they can't fight back against.
Let's talk about the importance
of building a bench,
[00:02:13]
something that I've echoed on this show
and in my political career.
It seems as if we are so fixated
on the presidential election
or national politics that we forget
the power of the local representative.
And when it comes down to it,
that local representative is going to
[00:02:29]
impact you faster and probably even more,
in a more aggressive manner
than, let's say, a presidential pick.
But if we don't focus on electing
folks locally, you don't have the bench.
[00:02:44]
You don't have the talent already
in position to take some of these national
elections, US Congress and presidential.
What say you to that?
Well, it is important
that we build a bench and we've started
to do that here in Georgia.
You know, in my eyes,
Georgia is a model for other states.
[00:02:59]
We've got two Democratic U.S.
Senators and one of them, Jon Ossoff,
is the youngest senator in the country.
I'm very proud of the fact.
Even though Kamala Harris lost an election
day, we elected the youngest member
of the Georgia state legislature.
Bryce Barry is 23 years old.
He's a morehouse graduate.
He's one of my best friends, and he
beat an incumbent Republican in Atlanta.
[00:03:19]
I think that's very, very noteworthy.
And I'm very proud of my friend.
And he's going to spend decades fighting
for progressive values in Georgia.
We've got a 23 year old who's going
to go in there and fight for his students
and his community.
That can't be said
for some of our 80 year old Democrats.
[00:03:35]
And it's definitely not said
for most of our Republicans.
If you look at a local level,
you know, I'm a proud Georgian.
Brian Kemp is the governor, took away
reproductive freedom in our state, which
has resulted in the death of Georgians.
He's refused to expand Medicaid, which
refuses to give 600,000 people health care
[00:03:50]
and has led to hospital closures
from downtown Atlanta to rural Georgia.
And he passed gun laws
that made it so unsafe
that a music festival had to cancel.
A local government
really does impact your life.
From the city council to the state
legislature, its governors and senators
[00:04:07]
who often end up running for president.
And if we don't put the right people
in these positions,
we're backing ourselves into the corner.
And I'll just say to your viewers,
the most important part of this
is a primary in many seats.
Whoever wins is just determined
in the Democratic or Republican primary.
Because we're so gerrymandered
and so polarized,
[00:04:23]
the turnout in primaries is so much lower.
If we're not going and engaging
and fighting in our primaries,
we're going to get a general election
candidate that we're not happy with.
And when young Democrats mobilize and
engage because less people are turning out
in primary, we have more of an opportunity
to make a difference, to win those seats.
And that's how we get
progressives elected.
[00:04:38]
You know, we mentioned Bryce,
and I echo your sentiment.
Bryce is a remarkable individual
who is now a remarkable representative.
Right.
But, Bryce,
I remember the first time I met Bryce,
very intentional, very intentional.
But there was this other dynamic
where the gatekeepers and let me be frank.
[00:04:57]
The gatekeepers in the Democratic Party,
many of them were not connecting
to our brother as they should.
And we have this as a program approach
[00:05:13]
where it's almost as if you got to wait
your turn, wait your turn for what?
There are individuals who have not been
purchased, who will not be purchased,
who believe in their ideals, who will not
back down to corporate interests, etc.
And it seems as if in the Democratic
Party, especially among those who we call
[00:05:30]
gatekeepers or traditionalists, they want
to hold those individuals at bay.
So. So how do we now?
There's one fight, obviously,
with the conservative agenda,
but how do we fight the agenda inside of
left leaning politics that would try
and silence a voice like Bryce and others?
[00:05:45]
Well, trust me, I run up against
those gatekeepers all the time.
It's very real.
Those smoke filled rooms of politics.
Unfortunately, the establishment
and the status quo is still
throwing around way too much weight.
And they're losing. Bryce is a winner.
[00:06:00]
He's done amazing things, and he's going
to prove why his voters elected him.
But it's really oftentimes the party will
say no, and they are really caught in
the past and they trip up over themselves.
In Georgia, we've tried to build youth
power within the Democratic Party.
[00:06:16]
I'm a state committee member
of the Georgia Democratic Party.
I vote on bylaws, changes, our leadership.
I go to those meetings
and I try to hold folks accountable.
But it really starts
in your county parties.
I'm really proud of another
friend of mine, Doro Heinz,
who's 25 years old, and he's the chairman
of the Henry County party.
[00:06:32]
Henry County had the largest shift
in the entire country towards Democrats.
Nine points towards Democrats.
I want to give my my friend Doro
his flowers on this one
because it takes youth organizing.
It takes folks that are kind of willing
to shake up the status quo,
[00:06:48]
move the party forward, stop fighting for,
you know, internal petty battles,
and start fighting for the people
you're supposed to represent.
We've got young people leading
our county parties across the state.
We've got 20 year old as the vice chairman
of the Gwinnett County party.
And in North Carolina, where I'm
getting my master's in public policy.
[00:07:04]
The chairwoman of our state party
is 27. And Clayton Breeze.
Anderson Breeze Clayton, she's an amazing
person and she has done a great job
with that state party.
And the fact is,
because she's willing to go in there.
She ran against an incumbent,
beat an incumbent, has gone in there,
developed a Hunter County party strategy,
and has made it so that they're
[00:07:22]
competing all across the state.
We need young people to throw their weight
around at these county party meetings,
because it's usually a bunch
of older folks that aren't really
up with the times, and we can go in there
and win some elections.
In Georgia, you have 159 counties,
and the majority of those counties,
[00:07:38]
you at least on paper,
you have a functional county
Democratic Party that becomes your conduit
to the state Democratic Party, that
becomes your proxy connection to the DNC.
But if you don't have
that local organization, it's
[00:07:54]
very difficult to penetrate beyond that.
And that's what you bring to the awareness
of viewers now is that there's
an apparatus is locally for you to join,
and if you don't have one in your
particular state, make one, start one.
[00:08:10]
Figure out how to create the chapter.
We'll say.
Well then, if you start a there's
30 counties in the state of Georgia
where we don't have a county party.
And it frustrates
the frustrates me deeply.
But the truth is, if you go in there
as a young progressive person and you say,
I want to start a county party,
[00:08:25]
you're going to end up
as the chair of that county party,
and then you're able to encourage people
to run for state legislature.
You're able to say, no,
we shouldn't take corporate PAC money.
We're going to have these
local community building events.
We're going to give back
to the county that we serve.
And then you're in a leadership position.
[00:08:42]
I'll tell you, if you go
to a county Democratic Party meeting,
whether it's DeKalb or Fulton or Newnan,
and you go there for a year,
you'll end up in leadership because a lot
of these folks are not dedicated.
It's a volunteer role.
And that's where these decisions are made.
That's where this money is thrown around,
and that's how these parties are operated.
[00:08:58]
So if you want to build power locally,
there's already this party apparatus.
And if you go in there and stir things up.
The likelihood is you're going to be able
to use that power toward a progressive
direction that hopefully can actually win
and deliver for the people of that county,
because I think Georgians
and people all over the country
[00:09:13]
are sick and tired of politicians
that don't put their needs first.
Yeah.
And you will also find these very
beautiful gems of individuals who we would
call them gatekeepers, but they're very
progressive in the belief of young people
having an opportunity for leadership.
[00:09:30]
And I've seen that as well.
And and I have misjudged
some people at times given,
assumptions, etc., in my past.
So I know that those gems exist
inside of those county party structures.
And while we are natural disruptors,
progressives are natural disruptors.
[00:09:47]
There are systems worthy of disruption.
That's the reason
why we are natural disruptors.
Before you go, man, I want to say this,
and I've said it on on
indisputable plenty of times
because we have to remind ourselves
of something you all will not be denied.
[00:10:05]
And and this is what I share
with my daughter.
And I actually find peace in this
no matter what happens.
You all are our future leaders. Period.
And when I think about it in that context,
I know that the future is bright.
[00:10:22]
When I saw students on college campuses
walking out in protest
of humanitarian dynamics,
the the inhumane treatment of Palestinians
walking off of campus hand in hand,
[00:10:40]
Jewish student groups,
Palestinian student groups.
I said, this is the future
who will lead us?
So when we look at it in that context,
it becomes a a a more,
a more fulfilling, and, and bright future.
[00:10:57]
But in order to be that,
leadership has to start now.
So for the young person
who's watching this right now
and they feel as if they're not empowered
to become that kind of leader.
What would you say to them?
You really are. I mean.
[00:11:12]
I've been involved in politics
for seven years, and now I'm on your show.
I started a high school Democrats club.
I walked out of my high school
against gun violence.
We organized against DACA,
the anti DACA restrictions from Donald
Trump and held a protest at my school.
And now I'm here because I kept fighting
and I didn't give up.
[00:11:29]
You know, in 2016 nobody thought
Georgia was a competitive state.
And now we have two Democratic U.S.
Senators, no matter what corner of
the country you're in, no matter how red
people care about working class values,
people care about justice, and they
see injustice in their own communities.
[00:11:45]
And when you go and you fight for what is
right, people will support you.
And you can't just let power
do what it wants with you.
The party system is frustrating,
but you need to take hold of it.
And if you want to change things up,
you need to grapple with the systems
[00:12:01]
that unfortunately define our politics.
So do these young folks out there.
It's not as hard as you may think,
I promise you.
You go to a county party meeting,
it's going to be 40 old people,
and a couple of them are going
to pinch you on the cheek because they're
so happy to see you because they
don't have any young folks there.
We need to invest in this coalition,
and y'all are the future.
[00:12:19]
I really believe every time I meet a
young person involved in politics or not,
the conversations we have are far less
polarizing because I think we all want
better for this country because we're
going to have to live with this future.
So get out there and fight
for the future that you want to see.
That's right.
Become the change you want to see.
[00:12:36]
Dear brother, we thank you, man.
I appreciate your friendship
and your authentic leadership
personally and professionally.
For those who are watching,
this is a great example to follow.
I'm looking forward
to continued great things from you.
And man, you have an open opportunity
anytime you want to come on the show,
[00:12:53]
just let me know.
Alright, I appreciate it.
It's really an honor to be here
and I will definitely take you up on that.
Thank you for your work.
It's always a pleasure to watch.
And, to your viewers,
have a happy New Year.
Thank you.
- Happy New Year, dear brother.
- Thank you for all you do.
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