Supermajority: New collective seeks to educate, train and mobilize 2 million women on equity issues

Black Lives Matter Co-Founder Alicia Garza speaks during the Women's March "Power to the Polls" voter registration tour launch at Sam Boyd Stadium on January 21, 2018 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Black Lives Matter Co-Founder Alicia Garza speaks during the Women's March "Power to the Polls" voter registration tour launch at Sam Boyd Stadium on January 21, 2018 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Three political and social justice activists have joined forces to form Supermajority, a new collective aimed at building a diverse women’s movement.

Alicia Garza (co-founder of Black Lives Matter), Cecile Richards (former president of Planned Parenthood) and Ai-jen Poo (executive director of the National Domestic Workers Alliance) launched Supermajority on April 29th and they are asking women all over the country to join them.

Why now and why women? Garza, Richards, and Poo have travelled across the nation gathering information from thousands of women activists on the hows and whys of their work. What they gleaned from that cross-country work helped shape the mission and tactics of Supermajority.

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The collective has an ambitious goal of educating, training and mobilizing 2 million women on equity issues over the next year. The hope is that those women will in turn help educate, train, and mobilize millions more.

In a statement, Supermajority says it will:

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Supermajority’s social media channels (just hours old at press time) have already garnered thousands of followers and robust engagement.

 

 

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