Alabama Young Dems Focus: Re-Elect Doug Jones
The Young Democrats of America wrapped up their national conference in Birmingham Sunday. More than 200 Democrats participated in training sessions to help organize in red states like Alabama. The conference left young Democrats across the state hopeful about the 2020 election.
Alabama Young Democrats were easy to spot at this weekend’s conference, which took place at the Sheraton Birmingham, many wearing U.S. Senator Doug Jones campaign buttons.
In case y’all haven’t heard, the @youngdems are in town! Welcome to the Magic City from Doug and all of us at HQ (hot tip, try white sauce while you’re here)! We’re thrilled to have you in Birmingham. #YDABH pic.twitter.com/jyLwz6VRIr
— Doug Jones for Senate (@DougJonesHQ) December 6, 2019
Robert Mardis III, president of Birmingham Young Democrats, says Jones can win the U.S. Senate seat again if he can connect with all Alabamians.
“And actually stay true to a message that resonates between not just black folks, not just Democrats, but with Alabama as a whole,” he says. “Because even though we’re Democrats and Republicans, we do have some similarities that will spark our interest to get us engaged.”
Mardis says their priorities include the elimination of student loan debt and climate change. That’s why, he says, he supports Bernie Sanders for president.
“Southern states are going to be the states that are more affected by climate change at a more rapid rate,” he says. “So that’s why I support Bernie overall.”
Adarris May of Birmingham planned to vote for Kamala Harris next year. She ended her campaign last week. He hasn’t decided which presidential candidate he’ll support next, but for now, May says his priority is to re-elect Senator Doug Jones.
“We’ve been on defense, our party in the state for a long time,” he says. “I think now finally with our senator and our representatives working for us, I think that we’re going to actually be able to accomplish a lot of things here.”
Josh Coleman, president of the Alabama Young Democrats, says this weekend’s conference taught Democrats how to better organize — not just in blue cities like Birmingham, but in rural areas, too. He says that will be key to re-electing Democratic lawmakers like Jones.
“We need to knock on doors, we need to make phone calls. We need to make people aware of what the senator is doing, what he’s done for folks in Alabama,” he says.
Coleman says the party has a lot of work to do in Alabama, but turning the state purple isn’t impossible.
Judge blocks Trump administration’s ending of protections for Venezuelans and Haitians
A federal judge on Friday blocked the Trump administration from ending temporary legal protections for more than 1 million people from Haiti and Venezuela who live in the United States.
Alcaraz beats Djokovic at the U.S. Open and will meet Sinner for Grand Slam final
Sinner is trying to become the first repeat men's champion in New York since Roger Federer won the tournament five years in a row. Alcaraz hasn't dropped a set as he pursues his second U.S. Open title.
Anthropic settles with authors in first-of-its-kind AI copyright infringement lawsuit
A U.S. district court is scheduled to consider whether to approve the settlement next week, in a case that marked the first substantive decision on how fair use applies to generative AI systems.
Under Trump, the Federal Trade Commission is abandoning its ban on noncompetes
Federal Trade Commission Chair Andrew Ferguson has called his agency's rule banning noncompetes unconstitutional. Still, he says protecting workers against noncompetes remains a priority.
Anthropic to pay authors $1.5B to settle lawsuit over pirated chatbot training material
The artificial intelligence company Anthropic has agreed to pay authors $3,000 per book in a landmark settlement over pirated chatbot training material.
You can trust the jobs report, Labor Department workers urge public
A strongly-worded statement from Bureau of Labor Statistics workers comes a month after President Trump attacked the integrity of the jobs numbers they release monthly.