At noon on a Monday, Rosenelle Florencechild is sitting on a blue camp chair in the parking lot of a Ray鈥檚 grocery store in Eagle Point, Oregon.
鈥淓xcuse me, sir,鈥 she hails one shopper. 鈥淎re you registered to vote in Jackson County?鈥
Florencechild is a volunteer with the group Jackson County for All of Us. Today, she鈥檚 gathering signatures in an effort to get three measures on Oregon鈥檚 May ballot regarding the county commissioner positions and their salaries.
It鈥檚 Florencechild鈥檚 first time volunteering for an effort like this, and she鈥檚 enjoying it.
鈥淕overnment is more approachable at the local level. And it affects us personally, and it鈥檚 something that we can do,鈥 she said.
The Jackson County measures are just a few of the many grassroots organizing efforts that have taken hold in the region recently. In Redding, a group tried to recall two members of the Gateway Unified School District. Grants Pass Mayor Sara Bristol survived a recall attempt this fall, after some citizens disagreed with her handling of the city鈥檚 homeless crisis and claimed she wasn鈥檛 representing her constituents鈥 conservative values. The coastal Oregon city of Brookings successfully recalled two city councilors and the mayor in November. In Shasta County, residents are trying to recall right-wing County Supervisor Kevin Crye, partly due to his vote to replace the county鈥檚 voting system with hand counting due to unfounded claims of election fraud. And a group in Josephine County has put a proposal on the ballot to change the county鈥檚 charter.
In some ways, this political organizing is not new. In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, Donald Trump鈥檚 loss in the 2020 Presidential Election, the dysfunction playing out in Washington D.C. and another impending presidential election, it makes sense that people are feeling frustrated and disillusioned with national politics.
But, rather than turning away from politics entirely, some now seem to be turning from the national level to the local level to make change.
鈥淧eople are starting to see, hey, the school board makes a lot of decisions about the curriculum that our kids are learning about. And the city council has a huge impact on city regulations, as do county commissioners,鈥 said Christopher Stout, a political science professor at Oregon State University. 鈥淧eople realize you can probably have more of an impact for less of an investment at the local level.鈥
This local-level work is something people can do to feel like they鈥檙e making a difference, Florencechild said.
鈥淪ometimes, Washington [D.C] is really far out there,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is a way you can make your voice heard.鈥
Interestingly, this mobilization does not seem confined to one party. In recent years, conservative groups have targeted school boards over issues like critical race theory and COVID mask mandates. But now, liberal groups are similarly focusing on local issues.
鈥淚 think nationally, conservatives were quicker to realize that you need to invest more in local-level offices,鈥 Stout said. 鈥淎nd now I think liberal groups are starting to kind of counter mobilize.鈥
National divisiveness becomes local
The problem, Stout said, is that the animosity of national politics can divide local communities, too.
鈥淭he bad thing is that it becomes really political. And where we used to trust our local elected officials, as that becomes more partisan and polarized, then decisions that they make that people in communities could generally rally behind then lead to more divisiveness,鈥 he said.
Mary Rickert has seen such divisiveness. She鈥檚 a supervisor in Shasta County, where the Crye recall effort is underway, the second supervisor recall on the ballot in two years.
Their supervisors鈥 meetings have become fraught with chaos, including shouting, arguments and verbal attacks. The board鈥檚 right-wing majority has pushed through a variety of controversial measures, including last year鈥檚 decision to hand count election ballots, which was later overturned by the state. Some say this climate is to blame for the top county staff who have recently left their positions.
In Rickert鈥檚 view, political organizing by a far-right group of citizens has been distracting and wasted time the county should have spent on more important issues.
鈥淭he combination of [COVID and Trump鈥檚 2020 loss] has really resulted in a much more tumultuous world in terms of local politics because there鈥檚 been this movement on a national level to make basically all politics local and to basically try and gain control, in quotation marks, of local government,鈥 she said.
Some local residents are looking for more control. Mike Oliver added his signature to get the Jackson County measures on the ballot. Oliver, who lives in Eagle Point, said he doesn鈥檛 feel his vote matters at the state or national level.
鈥淚 think people are frustrated. I think most people are frustrated with the way that the government鈥檚 going, period,鈥 he said.
Mike Rice of Eagle Point also signed. He鈥檚 frustrated and 鈥渄isturbed with the way the country鈥檚 going鈥 but sees local organizing like this as the path forward.
鈥淚 think you鈥檝e got to start at the local level if you鈥檙e going to change anything. Once you get a wave started, then expand it,鈥 he said.
鈥楢 trickle up鈥
This recent groundswell of public participation seems to have paid off for Jackson County for All of Us. The group originally planned to get the measures on the ballot in November but has been so successful, they now say they have enough signatures for the May ballot.
Denise Krause, one of the chief filers who previously ran for the Board of County Commissioners as a Democrat, said this effort has been discussed for 30 years and never got off the ground until now.
鈥淲e鈥檙e grateful that we have a democracy where we can do this, we can do the work. If we want it bad enough, we can do it. We can make it happen. The people do have the power, if they can only know it,鈥 she said.
Of course, not all ballot measures or recalls are successful. But the triple recall in Brookings was, and the Grants Pass and Shasta County recalls and Josephine County and Jackson County efforts got enough resident signatures to appear on the ballot.
What鈥檚 most important, Krause said, is not letting disillusionment at the national level keep people from working to improve things in their hometowns.
鈥淚 still feel hope for the local level that my gosh, we鈥檙e neighbors, we鈥檙e friends. We live together here in this area. Aren鈥檛 we all tired of partisanship when it comes to issues that have nothing to do with that? We need to be working together,鈥 she said.
In the Ray鈥檚 parking lot, Rosenelle Florencechild has added about a dozen signatures to her sign-up sheets in less than two hours.
鈥淢aybe there鈥檚 more of a trickle up than we think,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think if we become active locally, we鈥檙e going to be more active and thoughtful at the state level and then at the federal level.鈥
California will hold its primary election on March 5, and Oregon will hold its primary election on May 21.