Friend, I hope you and your family had a happy Thanksgiving.
Democrats are still working to pass Biden's expansive Build Back
Better agenda, and there is hope a deal could be done by Christmas to
double down on the largest investment in Americans since the Great
Depression.
We've already started to see the positive effects of Biden's big
infrastructure win, but more is needed to give Democrats any shot at
holding the House and expanding their Senate majority next year. The
headwinds are strong.
While Biden and the Democrats are pushing hard to get BBB over the
line, it's our job to remain vigilant. What we have seen in elections
this year is that when we can decisively define our opposition, we
win. If we get dragged into the muck, we lose.
That's our job at the Lincoln Project. We are targeting the most
important races next year to help hold the House and take on Trumpists
in every office – from Congress to state governorships. This team can
talk to voters and tell a unique story better than anyone else, and
it's our responsibility to do it.
Your
past support is the reason we're in such a strong position today. If
you have not yet given in 2021, we need your help now – with less than
a year left until the midterms, the map is starting to take shape. We
have to get into some of these races sooner rather than later to make
sure we beat back Trump and the mob. We have to give Biden a fighting
shot.
And if you want any indication about where a GOP-led House would
go, MTG is trying to give Kyle Rittenhouse the Congressional Medal of
Honor.
If you have not yet read about Lincoln's Thanksgiving messages and
the parallels between his enormous responsibility of keeping the Union
together and our fight to once again save our democracy, I encourage
you to do so.
-Joe Trippi

Friend,
This Thanksgiving, we're grateful
for you keeping us in this fight. You've heard from many of us about
what "this fight" is and what we must do to save our
democracy.
What does it mean to be part of the
Lincoln Project? What does it mean to be one of the millions of
supporters and donors who have stepped up, again and again, first to
defeat Trump in 2020 and now to defeat the authoritarian movement he
leads?
We know we email you a lot with
ways to get involved and yes, donation asks. But all we ask today,
this Thanksgiving, is for you to take a moment and read about a
Thanksgiving story (stories) you may not know.
One answer to that question is that
this is not a new fight. President Abraham Lincoln was elected to stop
rich southern slaveowners from taking over the government and using it
to enrich themselves. His election triggered Southern states forming
the Confederacy, firing on Fort Sumter, and ultimately launching a
bloody rebellion -- the Civil War.
It was a long, bloody fight, and
the first two years of the war saw Northern defeat after defeat. The
Union resolve was tested like it had never been. In winter of 1862, 17
state governors, trying to keep morale high, declared state
Thanksgiving holidays as a way of remembrance and encouraging the
community spirit the North desperately needed to summon.
Heather Cox Richardson's excellent
newsletter cites New York Governor Edwin Morgan's proclamation,
reflecting that 1862 "was nonetheless a time for giving thanks"
because “the precious blood shed in the cause of our country will
hallow and strengthen our love and our reverence for it and its
institutions…. Our Government and institutions placed in jeopardy have
brought us to a more just appreciation of their value.”
Abraham Lincoln read that
proclamation and those from the other states in the Union. The next
year, he declared a national Thanksgiving Day -- which marked a
turning point in the war after the Union turned back the Confederacy
at Gettysburg and began to push south.
On the first national Thanksgiving
Day, August 6, 1863, people around the country were reassured of the
Union victories, acknowledging the great sacrifice made by those who
died and their families. But this was only the first Thanksgiving Day
of 1863. In October, Lincoln declared a second Thanksgiving -- which
was reprinted in Harper's Weekly
and spread throughout the
nation. Take a moment and read it.
In it, Lincoln "fervently
implore(d) the interposition of the Almighty hand to heal the wounds
of the nation, and to restore it, as soon as may be consistent with
the Divine purposes, to the full enjoyment of peace, harmony,
tranquility, and union."
This was soon followed by an
address at Gettysburg that we all know well -- a proclamation
declaring the emancipation of every slave -- and ultimate victory,
defeating the Confederacy and restoring the Union.
Lincoln knew Reconstruction would
be arduous, and though he never lived to see it, the Union was rebuilt
and became the most prosperous democracy the world had ever seen, a
guiding force for freedom in the world.
As Richardson writes, "In 1861, Americans went to war to keep a cabal from taking
control of the government and turning it into an oligarchy. The fight
against that rebellion seemed at first to be too much for the nation
to survive. But Americans rallied and threw their hearts into the
cause on the battlefields even as they continued to work on the home
front for a government that defended democracy and equality before the
law."
As we celebrate Thanksgiving today,
remember that our democracy is challenged once again. We again must
come together and defend its very soul. Lives have already been lost
in this struggle, and more are threatened. But we give thanks for
those on the front lines, defending our democracy from this latest
authoritarian assault.
You may have seen that Joe Biden
just announced two virtual "Summits for Democracy" this week to bring
together leaders from all parts of our democracy in order to save it.
The timing is of course fitting, and it is necessary. It will take all
of us -- in every walk of life -- to defeat authoritarianism and
preserve the great American experiment. Please consider sharing this
story today with someone who needs to hear it.
Happy Thanksgiving. And yes, again,
thank you for keeping us in this fight our forefathers won again and
again. It's now up to us to do the same.
-Rick, Reed, Stuart, Joe, & the
Lincoln Project team
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