(Jewish Group) She quit the Women's March over antisemitism. Now she's behind this weekend's voting
She quit the Womens March over antisemitism. Now shes behind this weekends voting rights rallies.
Vanessa Wrubles progressive activism burst into public consciousness in late 2018 when she withdrew from the Womens March, the progressive organization founded in the wake of Donald Trumps election, saying that she was troubled by antisemitism she experienced within the groups leadership.
Since then, Wruble, who is Jewish, has continued to organize progressives through a separate group, March On. This weekend, March On will draw people concerned about Republican-led efforts to limit voting access to rallies in Washington, D.C., Atlanta and dozens of other communities across the country, as well as online.
The Union for Reform Judaism, the National Council of Jewish Women and the Anti-Defamation League are among the many organizations supporting the march, and Randi Weingarten, the American Federation of Teachers president who is married to a rabbi and says Jewish values animate her activism, is speaking in Washington.
The rally which kicks off a push to register 2 million voters in advance of the 2022 midterm elections, is timed to the 58th anniversary of the March on Washington when Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his famous I Have a Dream speech, galvanizing the civil rights movement. Wruble said the voting rights push is an extension of that movement, which included substantial Jewish participation.
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