Voting rights activists worried this would happen.
They feared that people would be Watch Metamorphoses Onlineblocked from voting in Kentucky as the state reduced polling locations due to the coronavirus. Its largest city, Louisville, with a population over 600,000, had just one polling place Tuesday. By 6 p.m. closing, people were running into the Kentucky Exposition Center to make the cutoff. Dozens, many of whom complained of parking congestion on their way in, were locked outside.
So they banged on the doors. They chanted. They demanded they be able to vote. After a judge ordered poll workers to let them in, the Kentuckians cheered as they flowed through the sliding glass doors. Journalist Joe Sonka of the Courier Journalcaught the powerful moment on video and shared it on Twitter.
The video, which has been watched more than 1.5 million times as of publishing, captures just how broken voting in America has become. It shows how painful it is to be prevented from voting as the country grapples with a pandemic and confronts a long history of police brutality and systemic racism.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
As a gaggle of people enter the exposition center, a Black woman approaches Sonka to explain why voting is so important to her. She’s joined by her 18-year-old daughter, who would be voting for the first time.
“We shouldn’t have to go through all this,” she says as she breaks down into tears. She says her daughter didn’t have a graduation, didn’t have a prom. She’s scared for her son’s life, her nephew’s life, her sister’s life. “Our children are the future. She shouldn’t be going through all this stuff we’re going through.”
Her daughter, with a pink face mask hanging around her neck, interjects every now and then, echoing her mother’s exasperation. “We’re all scared, Mama, we’re all scared,” her daughter says after rubbing her back to comfort her.
SEE ALSO: Facebook has a weak excuse for letting Trump spread misinformation on mail-in voting“Everybody here is going through something,” the mother says, calling for greater equality. “But we gotta work together.”
The judge kept the polling place open until 6:30 p.m. after Senate candidate Charles Booker demanded the extension. Afterward, his primary opponent, Amy McGrath, asked for one, too. Both are running for the Democratic nomination to challenge Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader.
The scene in Louisville is just one of many examples of a voting system under pressure due to the coronavirus. Georgia, which held primaries earlier this month, saw long lines, with some voters in the Atlanta metropolitan area waiting hours to cast their ballots. The same happened in Wisconsin in April.
Georgia and Kentucky both have vote-by-mail, but that didn’t prevent headaches at polling places in both states. In addition to fewer locations, states across the country have been dealing with fewer poll workers, with people choosing to stay home due to the virus. Then there’s Texas, which has been pushing back against changing its restrictive vote-by-mail rules. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump has been spreading lies about the safety of absentee ballots on Twitter. The social media platform recently started pushing back, adding a fact check label to a few of Trump’s tweets.
Come November, will Kentuckians face the same voting hurdles? Will Georgians? Will mail-in ballot rules be relaxed? Many questions about the general election remain unanswered, during a time of heightened uncertainty in a nation under stress.
Topics Social Good Elections Politics
Best PlayStation deal: Save $30.99 on the DualSense Edge controllerAustralia vs. Japan 2025 livestream: Watch World Cup qualifiers for freePornhub stops operating in FranceGrindr is testing AI chat summaries for paid usersBest AirPods deal: Get Apple AirPods Pro 2 for under $170Best earbuds deal: Save $30 on Bose QuietComfortGet the RayBest earbuds deal: Save $30 on Bose QuietComfortGet the RayNYT Strands hints, answers for June 5Nintendo Switch 2 vs Switch 1: What's new, what's not?How to unblock YouPorn for free in FranceAll ChatGPT conversations to be saved as part of ongoing lawsuits – even deleted onesNintendo Switch 2 vs Switch 1: What's new, what's not?Musetti vs. Alcaraz 2025 livestream: Watch French Open for freeSpain vs. France 2025 livestream: Watch UEFA Nations League semi final for freeChappell Roan's iPhone case is on sale right nowMobile Messaging Clients ComparedSabalenka vs. Swiatek 2025 livestream: Watch French Open for freeSave up to 48% on Kindle Kids, Fire HD Kids, or Echo Kids devices at Amazon Machado’s Catalogue of Failures by Margaret Jull Costa and Robin Patterson An NDN Boyhood by Billy Staff Picks: Punctures, Punishers, and Podcasts by The Paris Review Dance Time, across the Diaspora by Nadia Owusu Into the Narrow Home Below by Darcey Steinke The Ancestry Project by Mariah Stovall The Origin of My Laugh by Danielle Geller What Is the Word for Sky? by Nina MacLaughlin Three Possible Worlds by Natasha Marin The Art of Distance No. 21 by The Paris Review Anocha Suwichakornpong’s Memories of Unrest by Tash Aw Redux: This Satisfied Procession by The Paris Review The Crisis Cliché by Hermione Hoby The Devil’s Sting by Drew Bratcher The Art of Distance No. 12 by The Paris Review Let It Burn by Robert Jones, Jr. The Edge of the Map by Colin Dickey Poets on Couches: Reading Max Jacob by Suzanne Buffam and Srikanth Reddy You Have the Right to Remain Silent by Mary Morris There Was Beauty by Jill Talbot
2.4047s , 10130.796875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Metamorphoses Online】,Co-creation Information Network