Eric Liu: There's no such thing as not voting
Eric Liu is founder of Citizen University, which teaches the art of powerful citizenship, and the executive director of the Aspen Institute Citizenship & American Identity Program. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
some of these things.
and you wouldn't be entirely wrong.
is rigged in many ways.
of federal tax breaks
five percent of Americans?
across the political spectrum,
presidential election.
up and down the ballot
I still believe voting matters.
about how we can do that, and why.
in American history when voting was fun,
a grim duty to show up at the polls.
"most of American history."
to the Civil Rights Era,
and raucous culture of voting.
fasting and feasting and toasting,
immigrants and urban political machines
successive wave of new voters.
when new African-American voters,
with their newfound right to vote.
of theatricality to their fight,
as they claimed the franchise.
the promise of equal citizenship
knew that voting matters,
and the performance of power
since Selma and the Voting Rights Act,
citizens into spectators.
political memes on social media,
calls "being alone together."
that is about being together together,
"eat your vegetables" or "do you duty,"
across the country right now,
to revive a face-to-face set of ways
and their causes are mocked
and handmade posters and murals;
competing performers rep their candidates.
a little bit 18th century to you,
any more 18th century
are voting like this.
communal affairs.
is a festive, carnival-type atmosphere.
there is a spectacle,
here in America, who has time for this?
watches five hours of television a day.
called "The Joy of Voting."
artists and activists,
neighbors, everyday citizens
of voting in a local way.
all-night parties with hot DJs
is to show that you're registered to vote.
in the bed of a flatbed truck
to neighborhood.
all throughout colonial old town.
mixtapes and live graffiti art
in their beauty and their diversity,
for a new series of "I voted" stickers.
this artwork for these stickers,
his sense of intimidation about politics.
about the upcoming primary election,
not just passing out stickers,
and encouraging people to vote,
the election with passersby.
called the Wandering Aesthetics
these pickup truck plays.
an open call to the public
monologues, dialogues, poems,
that could be read aloud
isn't just about joy.
people of all different backgrounds
this kind of passionate, joyful activity
in urban and rural communities,
all citizenship is local.
just a presidential election,
and then we collapse, exhausted.
and other people in our community
of collective voice and imagination,
that this stuff matters.
that this is the stuff of self-government.
a self-fulfilling act of belief.
that makes any society thrive.
creative leap of faith.
the very power that we wish we had.
that democracy and theater
in ancient Athens.
out of the enclosure of her private self.
public experiences of shared ritual.
that all of our bonds in the end
the meaning of imagination,
of technical expertise.
or having the know-how.
to this question, "Why bother?"
and a bit more pointed.
no such thing as not voting.
may detest and oppose.
passive resistance,
are counter to your own,
to take advantage of your absence.
created the Tea Party
you know, politics is too messy,
of our votes adding up to anything.
silence themselves.
they changed American politics.
of Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders
the political status quo
of the previously possible
there's a lot of talk of revolution
to disrupt everyday democracy.
gives us a playbook for revolution.
turnout was 36 percent,
somewhere around 20 percent.
of this country change dramatically,
becomes radically more responsive
to mobilize 100 percent?
against efforts afoot
a positive culture of voting
sense of powerlessness.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Eric Liu - Civics educatorEric Liu is founder of Citizen University, which teaches the art of powerful citizenship, and the executive director of the Aspen Institute Citizenship & American Identity Program.
Why you should listen
Eric Liu is an author, educator and civic entrepreneur. He is the founder and CEO of Citizen University, which promotes and teaches the art of great citizenship through a portfolio of national programs, and the executive director of the Aspen Institute Citizenship and American Identity Program.
Liu's books include the national bestsellers The Gardens of Democracy, and The True Patriot, co-authored with Nick Hanauer. His most recent book is A Chinaman's Chance, published in July, 2014. His first book, The Accidental Asian: Notes of a Native Speaker, was a New York Times Notable Book featured in the PBS documentary "Matters of Race." His other books include Guiding Lights: How to Mentor – and Find Life's Purpose, the Official Book of National Mentoring Month; and Imagination First, co-authored with Scott Noppe-Brandon of the Lincoln Center Institute, which explores ways to unlock imagination in education, politics, business and the arts.
Liu served as a White House speechwriter for President Bill Clinton and later as the President's deputy domestic policy adviser. After the White House, he was an executive at the digital media company RealNetworks. In 2002 he was named one of the World Economic Forum’s Global Leaders of Tomorrow, and in 2010 he was awarded the Bill Grace Leadership Legacy Award by the Center for Ethical Leadership.
Liu lives in Seattle, where he teaches civic leadership at the University of Washington and hosts Citizen University TV, a television program about civic power. In addition to speaking regularly at venues across the country, he also serves on numerous nonprofit and civic boards. He is the co-founder of the Washington Alliance for Gun Responsibility. A board member of the Corporation for National and Community Service, he is a graduate of Yale College and Harvard Law School.
Eric Liu | Speaker | TED.com