ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Stacey Abrams - Politician
Former Georgia House Democratic Leader Stacey Abrams made history in 2018 when she earned the Democratic nomination for governor of Georgia.

Why you should listen

Stacey Abrams's 2018 campaign for governor of Georgia turned more voters than any Democrat in Georgia history, including former President Barack Obama, and invested in critical infrastructure to build progress in the state. After witnessing the gross mismanagement of the election by the Secretary of State's office, Abrams launched Fair Fight to ensure every Georgian has a voice in our election system.  

Abrams received degrees from Spelman College, the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas and Yale Law School. Dedicated to civic engagement, she founded the New Georgia Project, which submitted more than 200,000 registrations from voters of color between 2014 and 2016.

Under the pen name Selena Montgomery, Abrams is the award-winning author of eight romantic suspense novels, which have sold more than 100,000 copies. As co-founder of NOW Account, a financial services firm that helps small businesses grow, Abrams has helped create and retain jobs in Georgia. And through her various business ventures, she has helped employ even more Georgians, including hundreds of young people starting out. As House Minority Leader, she has worked strategically to recruit, train, elect and defend Democrats to prevent a Republican supermajority in the House, and she has worked across the aisle on behalf of all Georgians. During her tenure, she has stopped legislation to raise taxes on the poor and middle class and to roll back reproductive healthcare. She has brokered compromises that led to progress on transportation, infrastructure, and education. In the legislature, she passed legislation to improve the welfare of grandparents and other kin raising children and secured increased funding to support these families.

Abrams and her five siblings grew up in Gulfport, Mississippi with three tenets: go to school, go to church, and take care of each other. Despite struggling to make ends meet for their family, her parents made service a way of life for their children -- if someone was less fortunate, it was their job to serve that person. This ethic led the family to Georgia. Abrams's parents attended Emory University to pursue graduate studies in divinity and become United Methodist ministers. Abrams and her younger siblings attended DeKalb County Schools, and she graduated from Avondale High School.

More profile about the speaker
Stacey Abrams | Speaker | TED.com
TEDWomen 2018

Stacey Abrams: 3 questions to ask yourself about everything you do

Filmed:
3,767,559 views

How you respond after setbacks is what defines your character. Stacey Abrams was the first black woman in the history of the United States to be nominated by a major party for governor -- she lost that hotly contested race, but as she says: the only choice is to move forward. In an electrifying talk, she shares the lessons she learned from her campaign for governor of Georgia, some advice on how to change the world -- and a few hints at her next steps. "Be aggressive about your ambition," Abrams says.
- Politician
Former Georgia House Democratic Leader Stacey Abrams made history in 2018 when she earned the Democratic nomination for governor of Georgia. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:13
When I was in high school
at the age of 17 --
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I graduated from high school
in Decatur, Georgia,
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as valedictorian of my high school --
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I was very proud of myself.
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I was from a low-income community,
I had grown up in Mississippi,
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we'd moved from Mississippi to Georgia
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so my parents could pursue their degrees
as United Methodist ministers.
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We were poor, but they didn't think
we were poor enough,
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so they were going for permanent poverty.
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(Laughter)
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And so, while they studied at Emory,
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I studied at Avondale,
and I became valedictorian.
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Well, one of the joys of being
valedictorian in the state of Georgia
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is that you get invited
to meet the governor of Georgia.
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I was mildly interested in meeting him.
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It was kind of cool.
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I was more intrigued by the fact
that he lived in a mansion,
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because I watched a lot
of "General Hospital" and "Dynasty"
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as a child.
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(Laughter)
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And so I got up that morning,
ready to go to visit the governor.
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My mom and my dad,
who were also invited, got up,
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and we went outside.
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But we didn't get in our car.
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And in the south,
a car is a necessary thing.
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We don't have a lot of public transit,
there aren't a lot of options.
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But if you're lucky enough
to live in a community
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where you don't have a car,
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the only option is public transit.
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And that's what we had to take.
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And so we got on the bus.
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And we took the bus from Decatur
all the way to Buckhead,
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where the Governor's Mansion sat
on this really beautiful acreage of land,
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with these long black gates
that ran the length of the property.
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We get to the Governor's Mansion,
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we pull the little lever
that lets them know this is our stop,
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we get off the bus,
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my mom, my dad and I,
we walk across the street.
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We walk up the driveway,
because there are cars coming up,
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cars bringing in students
from all across the state of Georgia.
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So we're walking along the side.
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And as we walk single file along the side,
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my mom and dad sandwiching me to make sure
I don't get hit by one of the cars
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bringing in the other valedictorians,
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we approach the guard gate.
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When we get to the guard gate,
the guard comes out.
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He looks at me,
and he looks at my parents,
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and he says, "You don't belong here,
this is a private event."
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My dad says, "No, this is my daughter,
Stacey. She's one of the valedictorians."
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But the guard doesn't look
at the checklist that's in his hands.
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He doesn't ask my mom for the invitation
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that's at the bottom
of her very voluminous purse.
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Instead, he looks
over our shoulder at the bus,
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because in his mind, the bus is telling
him a story about who should be there.
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And the fact that we were too poor
to have our own car --
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that was a story he told himself.
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And he may have seen
something in my skin color,
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he may have seen something in my attire;
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I don't know what went through his mind.
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But his conclusion was
to look at me again,
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and with a look of disdain, say,
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"I told you, this is a private event.
You don't belong here."
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Now, my parents were studying to become
United Methodist ministers,
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but they were not pastors yet.
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(Laughter)
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And so they proceeded
to engage this gentleman
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in a very robust discussion
of his decision-making skills.
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(Laughter)
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My father may have mentioned
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that he was going to spend eternity
in a very fiery place
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if he didn't find my name
on that checklist.
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And indeed, the man checks
the checklist eventually,
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and he found my name,
and he let us inside.
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But I don't remember meeting
the governor of Georgia.
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I don't recall meeting
my fellow valedictorians
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from 180 school districts.
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The only clear memory I have of that day
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was a man standing in front
of the most powerful place in Georgia,
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looking at me and telling me
I don't belong.
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And so I decided, 20-some-odd years later,
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to be the person
who got to open the gates.
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(Cheers)
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(Applause)
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Unfortunately, you may have read
the rest of the story.
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It didn't quite work out that way.
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And now I'm tasked with figuring out:
How do I move forward?
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Because, you see, I didn't just want
to open the gates for young black women
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who had been underestimated
and told they don't belong.
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I wanted to open those gates
for Latinas and for Asian Americans.
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I wanted to open those gates
for the undocumented and the documented.
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I wanted to open those gates
as an ally of the LGBTQ community.
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I wanted to open those gates
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for the families that have to call
themselves the victims of gun violence.
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I wanted to open those gates wide
for everyone in Georgia,
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because that is our state,
and this is our nation,
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and we all belong here.
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(Cheers)
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(Applause)
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But what I recognized
is that the first try wasn't enough.
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And my question became:
How do I move forward?
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How do I get beyond the bitterness
and the sadness and the lethargy
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and watching an inordinate amount
of television as I eat ice cream?
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(Laughter)
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What do I do next?
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And I'm going to do what I've always done.
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I'm going to move forward,
because going backwards isn't an option
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and standing still is not enough.
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(Applause)
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You see, I began my race for governor
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by analyzing who I was
and what I wanted to be.
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And there are three questions
I ask myself about everything I do,
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whether it's running for office
or starting a business;
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when I decided to start
the New Georgia Project
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to register people to vote;
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or when I started the latest action,
Fair Fight Georgia.
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No matter what I do,
I ask myself three questions:
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What do I want?
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Why do I want it?
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And how do I get it?
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And in this case, I know what I want.
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I want change.
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That is what I want.
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But the question is:
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What change do I want to see?
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And I know that the questions
I have to ask myself are:
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One, am I honest about the scope
of my ambition?
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Because it's easy to figure out
that once you didn't get what you wanted,
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then maybe you should
have set your sights a little lower,
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but I'm here to tell you
to be aggressive about your ambition.
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Do not allow setbacks to set you back.
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(Applause)
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Number two, let yourself
understand your mistakes.
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But also understand their mistakes,
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because, as women in particular,
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we're taught that if something
doesn't work out,
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it's probably our fault.
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And usually, there is something
we could do better,
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but we've been told
not to investigate too much
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what the other side could have done.
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And this isn't partisan -- it's people.
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We're too often told
that our mistakes are ours alone,
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but victory is a shared benefit.
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And so what I tell you to do
is understand your mistakes,
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but understand the mistakes of others.
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And be clearheaded about it.
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And be honest with yourself
and honest with those who support you.
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But once you know what you want,
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understand why you want it.
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And even though it feels good,
revenge is not a good reason.
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(Laughter)
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Instead, make sure you want it
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because there's something
not that you should do,
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but something you must do.
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It has to be something
that doesn't allow you to sleep at night
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unless you're dreaming about it;
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something that wakes you up in the morning
and gets you excited about it;
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or something that makes you so angry,
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you know you have to do
something about it.
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But know why you're doing it.
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And know why it must be done.
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You've listened to women
from across this world
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talk about why things have to happen.
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But figure out what the "why" is for you,
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because jumping from
the "what" to the "do"
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is meaningless if you don't know why.
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Because when it gets hard,
when it gets tough,
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when your friends walk away from you,
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when your supporters forget you,
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when you don't win your first race --
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if you don't know why,
you can't try again.
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So, first know what you want.
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Second, know why you want it,
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but third, know how
you're going to get it done.
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I faced a few obstacles in this race.
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(Laughter)
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Just a few.
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But in the pursuit,
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I became the first black woman
to ever become the nominee for governor
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in the history of the United States
of America for a major party.
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(Cheers)
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(Applause)
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But more importantly, in this process,
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we turned out 1.2 million
African American voters in Georgia.
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That is more voters
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than voted on the Democratic side
of the ticket in 2014.
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(Applause)
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Our campaign tripled the number of Latinos
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who believed their voices mattered
in the state of Georgia.
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We tripled the number of Asian Americans
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who stood up and said,
"This is our state, too."
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Those are successes that tell me
how I can get it done.
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But they also let me understand
the obstacles aren't insurmountable.
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They're just a little high.
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But I also understand
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that there are three things
that always hold us hostage.
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The first is finances.
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Now, you may have heard,
I'm in a little bit of debt.
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If you didn't hear about it,
you did not go outside.
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(Laughter)
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And finances are something
that holds us back so often,
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our dreams are bounded
by how much we have in resources.
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But we hear again and again
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the stories of those who overcome
those resource challenges.
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But you can't overcome
something you don't talk about.
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And that's why I didn't allow them
to debt-shame me in my campaign.
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I didn't allow anyone to tell me
that my lack of opportunity
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was a reason to disqualify
me from running.
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And believe me, people tried
to tell me I shouldn't run.
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Friends told me not to run.
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Allies told me not to run.
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"USA Today" mentioned
maybe I shouldn't run.
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(Laughter)
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But no matter who it was,
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I understood that finances are often
a reason we don't let ourselves dream.
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I can't say that you will always
overcome those obstacles,
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but I will tell you,
you will be damned if you do not try.
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(Applause)
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The second is fear.
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And fear is real.
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It is paralyzing.
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It is terrifying.
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But it can also be energizing,
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because once you know
what you're afraid of,
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you can figure out how to get around it.
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And the third is fatigue.
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Sometimes you just get tired of trying.
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You get tired of reading
about processes and politics
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and the things that stop you
from getting where you want to be.
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Sometimes, fatigue means that we accept
position instead of power.
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We let someone give us a title
as a consolation prize,
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rather than realizing we know what we want
and we're going to get it,
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even if we're tired.
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That's why God created naps.
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(Laughter)
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But we also learn in those moments
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that fatigue is an opportunity
to evaluate how much we want it.
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Because if you are beaten down,
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if you have worked as hard as you can,
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if you have done everything
you said you should,
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and it still doesn't work out,
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fatigue can sap you of your energy.
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But that's why you go back
to the "why" of it.
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Because I know we have to have women
who speak for the voiceless.
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I know we have to have people
of good conscience
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who stand up against oppression.
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I know we have to have people
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who understand that social justice
belongs to us all.
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And that wakes me up every morning,
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and that makes me fight even harder.
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Because I am moving forward,
knowing what is in my past.
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I know the obstacles they have for me.
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I know what they're going to do,
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and I'm fairly certain they're energizing
and creating new obstacles now.
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But they've got four years
to figure it out.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Maybe two.
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(Cheers)
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(Applause)
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But here's my point:
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I know what I want, and that is justice.
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I know why I want it,
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because poverty is immoral,
and it is a stain on our nation.
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And I know how I'm going to get it:
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by moving forward every single day.
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Thank you so much.
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(Cheers)
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(Applause)
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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Stacey Abrams - Politician
Former Georgia House Democratic Leader Stacey Abrams made history in 2018 when she earned the Democratic nomination for governor of Georgia.

Why you should listen

Stacey Abrams's 2018 campaign for governor of Georgia turned more voters than any Democrat in Georgia history, including former President Barack Obama, and invested in critical infrastructure to build progress in the state. After witnessing the gross mismanagement of the election by the Secretary of State's office, Abrams launched Fair Fight to ensure every Georgian has a voice in our election system.  

Abrams received degrees from Spelman College, the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas and Yale Law School. Dedicated to civic engagement, she founded the New Georgia Project, which submitted more than 200,000 registrations from voters of color between 2014 and 2016.

Under the pen name Selena Montgomery, Abrams is the award-winning author of eight romantic suspense novels, which have sold more than 100,000 copies. As co-founder of NOW Account, a financial services firm that helps small businesses grow, Abrams has helped create and retain jobs in Georgia. And through her various business ventures, she has helped employ even more Georgians, including hundreds of young people starting out. As House Minority Leader, she has worked strategically to recruit, train, elect and defend Democrats to prevent a Republican supermajority in the House, and she has worked across the aisle on behalf of all Georgians. During her tenure, she has stopped legislation to raise taxes on the poor and middle class and to roll back reproductive healthcare. She has brokered compromises that led to progress on transportation, infrastructure, and education. In the legislature, she passed legislation to improve the welfare of grandparents and other kin raising children and secured increased funding to support these families.

Abrams and her five siblings grew up in Gulfport, Mississippi with three tenets: go to school, go to church, and take care of each other. Despite struggling to make ends meet for their family, her parents made service a way of life for their children -- if someone was less fortunate, it was their job to serve that person. This ethic led the family to Georgia. Abrams's parents attended Emory University to pursue graduate studies in divinity and become United Methodist ministers. Abrams and her younger siblings attended DeKalb County Schools, and she graduated from Avondale High School.

More profile about the speaker
Stacey Abrams | Speaker | TED.com

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