If Democracy Is “We The People” Who Are You Hearing?
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The fastest way to lose your community is to stop listening to it. Josiellia Williams, sat with Senator Maggie Glover for a wide-ranging, deeply personal talk about what real representation looks like in South Carolina politics and why she believes every elected seat is an “assignment” that belongs to the people who put you there. From the start, she takes us back to the early campaigns, the purple-and-gold momentum, and the lesson that never leaves her: you can’t govern on one vote, one family, or one ego.
We dig into the policy fights that tested that philosophy. Senator Glover shares what it felt like to walk into the State House and see the Confederate flag displayed in the chambers, and why she introduced the first House legislation to remove it. She connects the history to the present with a clear-eyed view of how symbols shape power, who gets heard, and what it takes to move change through two chambers when emotions run high and accountability gets blurry.
Then we shift to bread-and-butter outcomes: education funding, the South Carolina educational lottery, and how the Life scholarship approach can open doors for students who need a fair shot. We also explore the long, complicated story of I-73, including the overlooked role of a young Florentine, Anthony Cooper, whose research helped shape the proposed route, and why recognition and resources don’t always follow the people who do the work.
We close with a direct call on voting rights and voter registration: purges, ID hurdles, misinformation, and what it will take to show up in 2026 and beyond. Subscribe, share this conversation with someone who cares about democracy, and leave a review, then tell us: what’s the biggest barrier to voting in your community right now?
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