City of Syracuse

Syracuse Seniors Cast Their Ballots

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ANCHOR: WITH MIDTERMS ELECTIONS WELL UNDERWAY, MANY IMPASSIONED SYRACUSE SENIOR CITIZENS CASTED THEIR BALLOTS TODAY AT FRANK DE-FRANCISCO EASTWOOD COMMUNITY CENTER WITH THE HOPE OF A MORE EQUITABLE AND PROSPEROUS FUTURE.

70-YEAR-OLD JUDY EVANS STRESSED THE IMPORTANCE OF VOTER PARTICIPATION AS A FREEDOM IN THIS COUNTRY THAT’S ALL TOO OFTEN TAKEN FOR GRANTED.

JUDY EVANS: “I remember people dying, and the sacrifice’s people made to vote is not only a choice, it’s a privilege. Because I feel like it’s a privilege, I vote every opportunity I have, and I raised my children that way and my mother raised me that way, so this is a privilege to be able to come here and voice my opinion.”

ANCHOR: AFTER A LIFETIME OF FIGHTING FOR EQUALITY, JUDY EVANS HOPES THAT ALL VOICES WILL BE HEARD AND REPRESENTED EQUALLY.

JUDY EVANS: “Everyone should be treated equally, whatever is available to you, whether you’re rich or poor, you should be able to have it. I don’t think one or two people because they have a few more dollars in their pockets than I have, that they should be able to make a decision about my life because they have no idea what it’s life to live the way we live.

ANCHOR: LIKE EVANS, 90-YEAR-OLD MADDIE DORSAL, WAS DRAWN TO THE POLLS TO AT LAST SEE MARGINALIZED COMMUNITIES BE FAIRLY REPRESENTED BY DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES IN SYRACUSE.

MADDIE DORSAL: “I think everyone should be equal, no matter their color, their race, sexuality, or whatever. Everybody should vote, this is our opportunity.”

ANCHOR: WHILE ANTICIPATION AND EMOTIONS ARE HIGH THIS ELECTION, MANY VOTERS REMAIN OPTIMISTIC THAT EQUALITY WILL PREVAIL THIS UPCOMING MIDTERM.

IN SYRACUSE, I’M WHITNEY WILSON WITH DEMOCRACY IN ACTION.

East Syracuse, N.Y. (DIA) – Impassioned Syracuse senior citizens cast their ballots at Frank DeFrancisco Eastwood Community Center.

Judy Evans, 70, stressed the importance of voter participation as a freedom that is all too often taken for granted by Americans.

“I remember people dying, and the sacrifices people made to vote is not only a choice, it’s a privilege. Because I feel like it’s a privilege, I vote every opportunity I have, and I raised my children that way and my mother raised me that way, and so this is a privilege to be able to come here and voice my opinion,” said Evans.

After a lifetime of fighting for equality, Judy Evans hopes that all voices will be heard and represented equally.

“Everyone should be treated equally, whatever is available to you, whether you’re rich or poor, you should be able to have it. I don’t think one or two people, because they have a few more dollars in their pockets than I have, that they should be able to make a decision about my life because they have no idea what it’s like to live the way we live,” said Evans.

Like Evans, Maddie Dorsal, 90, says she was drawn to the polls to at last see Democratic representatives in Syracuse fairly represent marginalized communities.

“I think everyone should be equal, no matter their color, their race, sexuality, or whatever. Everybody should vote, for this is our opportunity.”

 

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