Mattie Weiss is a long-time youth movement organizer, writer, and leader. She is a 2001 graduate of Swarthmore College, where she studied political science and organized students and staff around issues of global economic justice, local race politics, and a campus-based living wage campaign. While in college, Mattie was also a community muralist and a union organizer in Minneapolis and worked for the Active Element Foundation in New York, doing research for the Future 500 national youth organizing directory.
After graduation, Mattie was a writer and researcher for the Applied Research Center in Oakland, Calif., a racial justice "think and do tank," where she wrote and published Youth Rising, a major report on youth organizing around the country. She also wrote two chapters of the book, How to Get Stupid White Men Out of Office, which she toured around the country, organizing and speaking on behalf of the League of Pissed Off Voters in the 2004 presidential election. Most recently Mattie worked in Salvador, Brazil, with a public health study abroad program. She has also lived in Nicaragua, Bolivia, and South Africa.
POSTS BY MATTIE WEISS
We here at Campus Camp Wellstone are so excited about a piece of
legislation that passed along with Health Care Reform, and we had to
make sure you knew what was in the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility
Act (SAFRA).
Earlier this month, Campus Progress held their annual National Conference in Washington DC. At the conference were tons of big name progressives like President Clinton, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and others. Campus Camp Wellstone was there, too.
Young
People For's 2009 National Summit brought together young, passionate progressives
from all over the country to focus on
leadership development and sustainable strategies to promote social
justice.
Warning that communities of color will likely
be excluded from new, green-collar jobs created in the rush to "green" the American economy, author and activist Van Jones proposes an opportunity to save the earth and renew our communities.
Newsweek released a poll on Monday showing Presidential
candidates John McCain and Barack Obama in a dead heat. But not among my generation.
We spent a whole week with the organizers, leaders, and front-line activists of the Power Vote campaign training them on the skills needed to successfully fight for a clean energy future on their campuses and in their communities.