Friend,
With competing climate and health crises, widespread racial unrest, and a state budget that prioritizes billionaires over working people, it’s crucial we make our voices heard this November at the ballot box. We know that we need to beat Trump -- and New York also needs so much more than that.
The decisions our leaders make in this moment will be remembered by future generations. And the actions we all take -- to hold those leaders accountable, to care for our communities, and to fight for our values-- will be remembered too.
Will you take the pledge to vote on the WFP line for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris?
We have been fighting alongside the Working Families Party for the issues that matter most to our members. Alongside WFP, we’ve helped challenge Governor Cuomo, raised the minimum wage to $15/ hour, fought to end cash bail, and drastically expanded tenant protections and the rights of undocumented immigrants and farmworkers.
Not only that, but the WFP went all out to challenge corporate control of our democracy in New York by wiping the Independent Democratic Conference off the map, essentially remaking the political playing field in New York. That’s huge.
And we are still fighting for a better future for New Yorkers in November and beyond Election Day.
Will you pledge to vote on the Working Families party line this November?
This election -- take the pledge and join me in voting on the Working Families Party line for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. And if you can, volunteer with WFP to help get more progressives like us to do the same.
Will you volunteer to talk to other New Yorkers about the importance of voting on the WFP line? Sign up here.
When you vote on the WFP line, you send a clear message that you’re a progressive. You send a message that you are one of the hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers who want the candidate who will fight for working people, to deliver healthcare for all, to center low-income and working class people, immigrants, Black and Brown people in the COVID recovery effort.
In solidarity,
Jonathan Westin, NYCC