Black women in American politics

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Black women have been involved in American socio-political issues and advocating for the community since the American Civil War era through organizations, clubs, community-based social services, and advocacy. Black women are currently underrepresented in the United States in both elected offices and in policy made by elected officials.[1] Although data shows that women do not run for office in large numbers when compared to men,[1] Black women have been involved in issues concerning identity, human rights, child welfare, and misogynoir within the political dialogue for decades. Women in government are preferred by ethnic minorities over their White colleagues. Researchers studying black politics have discovered that White voters have prejudices towards Black candidates. Descriptive representation is important for Black voters. Black women's positional behavior and ideology are influenced by a distinctive Black female consciousness. Support for Black women candidates among Black women may result from a prioritization of racial concerns above gendered interests.[2]

History

Black women's suffrage, voting rights and racism

A number of organizations supporting Black women have historically played an important role in politics.

and was more involved in Black political matters with the aim to improve the quality of life for Black women and their families. NCNW still exists today as a non-profit organization reaching out through research, advocacy, and social services in the United States and Africa.

In 1946, Mary Fair Burks founded the Women's Political Council (WPC) as a response to discrimination in the Montgomery League of Women Voters, who refused to allow Black women to join.[138] The WPC sought to improve social services for the Black community and is famously known for instigating the Montgomery bus boycott.[139]

In the 1970s, the

Combahee River Collective Statement, which helped to expand on ideas about identity politics.[142]

In 2014, political activist and women's rights leader Leslie Wimes founded the Democratic African-American Woman's Caucus (DAAWC) in Florida. She enlisted the help of Wendy Sejour and El Portal mayor Daisy Black to help Black women in the state of Florida have a voice.[143] In the last two presidential elections, the turnout percentage of Black women was greater than all other demographic groups, yet has not translated into more Black women in office nor political power for Black women. Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe credits Black women for his win in the state.[144] Black women-owned businesses are the fastest growing segment of the women owned business market.[145] The DAAWC seeks to increase the number of elected Black women on the State and Federal levels, as well as focus on issues specific to Black women. While the DAAWC begins in the state of Florida, the organization is hoping to expand to other states to mobilize the political power of Black women.

Assata's Daughters was founded in March 2015 by Page May in order to protest against the lack of response to Eric Garner's death.[146][147] Centered in Chicago, Assata's Daughters is named after controversial Black Panther Party and Black Liberation Army member Assata Shakur.[148][149][150] The organization is part of a cluster of Black activist organizations known as the Movement for Black Lives.[146] Assata's Daughters has worked to speak out against police militarization, immigrant deportation, the Dakota Access Pipeline, and President Donald Trump.

Socio-political movements

20th century

Civil rights

The civil rights movement in the United States was a decades-long struggle by Black Americans to end legalized

Septima Clark
.

Coretta Scott King in Manhattan Central Park
Coretta Scott King in Manhattan Central Park just after the assassination of Dr. King.

Coretta Scott King, wife of Martin Luther King Jr., was an active advocate for racial equality, she was a leader for the Civil rights movement in the 1960s. King played a prominent role in the years after her husband's assassination in 1968 when she took on the leadership of the struggle for racial equality herself and became active in the Women's Movement. Coretta Scott King founded the King Center and sought to make her husband's birthday a national holiday. She later broadened her scope to include both advocacy for LGBT rights and opposition to apartheid. She was inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame, the National Women's Hall of Fame, and was the first Black person to lie in repose the Georgia State Capitol.[152] King has been referred to as "First Lady of the Civil Rights Movement".[153]

Dorothy Height and Eleanor Roosevelt
Dorothy Height presents Eleanor Roosevelt with the Mary McLeod Bethune Human Rights Award, 12 Nov 1960

Dorothy Height is credited as the first leader during the civil rights movement to recognize inequality for both Black people and women of any color concurrently and was the president of the

Civil Rights Movement, Height organized "Wednesdays in Mississippi,"[156] which brought together both Black and white women from the North and South to create a dialogue of understanding. She fought for equal rights for both Black people and women of all races. Height was one of the only known women to partake in the organization of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.[154] Upon working with Martin Luther King Jr., Height stated that King had once told her that Height was responsible for making The NAACP look acceptable during difficult times in the movement.[157] In his autobiography, civil rights leader James Farmer described Height as one of the "Big Six" of the Civil Rights Movement as behind the scenes and sharing the podium with Dr. King, but noted that her role was frequently ignored by the press due to sexism.[158] Height was also a founding member of the Council for United Civil Rights Leadership
.

Septima Clark is most known for establishing "Citizenship Schools" that taught reading to adults throughout the

Civil Rights Movement and served as a means to empower Black communities.[160] Clark's goals for the schools were to provide self-pride, cultural-pride, literacy, and a sense of one's citizenship rights. Teaching reading literacy helped countless Black southerners push for the right to vote and developed future leaders across the country.[161] The citizenship schools were also seen as a form of support to Martin Luther King Jr. in the nonviolent Civil Rights Movement.[159] Clark became known as the "Queen mother" or "Grandmother" of the Civil Rights Movement in the United States,[162] and Martin Luther King Jr. commonly referred to Clark as "The Mother of the Movement".[163]

Abolition of police departments

Since the 1960s, municipal governments have increasingly spent larger portions of their budgets on law enforcement than social and rehabilitation services. Ideas to reallocate funds from law enforcement to social services were not novel in the 1960s. In 1935, W. E. B. Dubois wrote about "abolition-democracy," in his book, Black Reconstruction in America.[164] Activists such as Angela Davis also advocated for the defunding or abolition of police departments throughout the 20th and 21st centuries.[165][166]

Modern movements

#MeToo

Tarana Burke at the 2018 Disobedience Awards.
Tarana Burke at the 2018 Disobedience Awards.

In 2006, social activist and community organizer

accusations of predatory behavior by Harvey Weinstein, that awareness rose after actress Alyssa Milano encouraged the use of the phrase as a hashtag.[168] Her intent was for social media to help reveal the extent of problems with sexual harassment and assault.[168] The day after Milano tweeted the hashtag, she wrote: "I was just made aware of an earlier #MeToo movement, and the origin story is equal parts heartbreaking and inspiring", crediting and linking to Burke.[167][169][170] Burke said she was inspired to use the phrase after her lack of response to a 13-year-old girl who confided to her that she had been sexually assaulted. She said she wishes she had simply told the girl: "Me too".[167]

A number of high-profile posts and responses from American celebrities soon followed, and the movement exposed several high-profile men of systematic sexual abuse, such as

R. Kelly
.

Me Too has received criticism from people who have cited reasons such as it not having due process, victims coming out too late, and "going too far in labeling things," while also using it as a reason for them to not include women in their own activities for fear of being punished and getting in trouble.[171][172]

The criticisms have been the vocal minority however, as "More than twice as many Americans support rather than oppose the #MeToo movement."

Black Lives Matter

Patrisse Cullors
Patrisse Cullors

Opal Tometi.[173][174] The movement began with the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter on social media platform Twitter after frustration over George Zimmerman's acquittal in the shooting of 17-year-old African-American Trayvon Martin in 2013.[175] Garza wrote a Facebook post titled, "A Love Note to Black People" in which she said: "Our Lives Matter, Black Lives Matter".[176] Cullors then created the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter to corroborate Garza's use of the phrase.[175] Tometi added her support, and Black Lives Matter was borne as an online campaign.[176] In particular, the movement was borne and Garza's post became popularized after protests emerged in Ferguson, Missouri, where an unarmed Black teenager was shot and killed by a white police officer.[177]

Cullors has acknowledged social media as responsible in exposing violence against Black Americans, saying: "On a daily basis, every moment, Black folks are being bombarded with images of our death ... It's literally saying, 'Black people, you might be next. You will be next, but in hindsight it will be better for our nation, the less of our kind, the more safe it will be."[178]

Garza does not think of the Black Lives Matter movement as something created by any one person. She feels her work is only a continuation of the continued historical

#MeToo movement.[180][181]

#SayHerName

Women from within the Black Lives Matter movement, including

Breonna Taylor by police in her bed as she slept on March 13, 2020, #SayHerName
has become even more prominent.

#ByeAnita

Rekia Boyd, a 22-year-old Black woman, at the hands of Chicago police officer Dante Servin, with a sign that read "Justice for Rekia, No votes for Anita."[187] Alvarez had been the State's Attorney at the time and she charged Servin with involuntary manslaughter, a charge of which he was acquitted in 2015.[188]

During Alvarez's re-election bid, Assata's Daughters hung 16 banners around Chicago, to correspond to the number of bullets fired into MacDonald, with slogans such as "#ByeAnita", "#AdiosAnita 16 shots and a cover up", and "Blood on the Ballot".[187]

#MuteRKelly

A protester holds a handmade sign that reads, #MuteRKelly.
A protester holds a handmade sign that reads, #MuteRKelly.

The related campaign,

dream hampton, together with Joel Karsberg, Jesse Daniels and Tamra Simmons. The first season was a critical success[190][191] and the premiere episode was Lifetime's highest-rated program in more than two years, with 1.9 million total viewers.[192] Rotten Tomatoes reads, "By unearthing previously suppressed histories, Surviving R. Kelly exposes the dangers of enabling predatory behavior and gives necessary voice to its survivors."[190]

On March 6, 2019, television program CBS This Morning broadcast an interview with Kelly by Gayle King, in which Kelly insisted on his innocence and blamed social media for the allegations.[193] Attracting media attention was an emotional outburst by Kelly during the interview where he stood up, pounded his chest, and yelled.[194]

On September 27, 2021, Kelly was found guilty on nine counts including racketeering, sexual exploitation of a child, kidnapping, bribery, sex trafficking, and a violation of the Mann Act. The judge ordered that Kelly remain in custody pending sentencing.[195][196][197]

Activists

19th century
Sadie L. Adams Sarah Allen Ruth L. Bennett Irene Moorman Blackstone
Sarah J. Garnet
Frances Harper
Mary Ellen Pleasant Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin
Harriet Tubman Sojourner Truth Ida B. Wells Henrietta Wood
20th century
Juanita Abernathy Sadie L. Adams Ella Baker Josephine Baker Willie Barrow
Charlotta Bass Mary McLeod Bethune Unita Blackwell Mary Booze
Dorothy Boulding Ferebee
Ida M. Bowman Becks Lillie Mae Bradford Mary Fair Burks Eva Carter Buckner Catherine Burks-Brooks
Theresa Burroughs Nannie Helen Burroughs Roberta Byrd Barr Mae Bertha Carter Septima Clark
Claudette Colvin Dorothy Cotton Thelma Dailey-Stout Angela Davis Ruby Dee
Juliette Derricotte Oberia Dempsey Doris Derby
Annie Devine
Theresa El-Amin
Ruth Ellis Fannie Emanuel Myrlie Evers-Williams Sarah Mae Flemming Martha E. Forrester
Marie Foster Lucille Gorham Mamie Garvin Fields Rosa Slade Gragg Victoria Gray Adams
Major Griffin-Gracy Fannie Lou Hamer Elizabeth Harden Gilmore Dorothy Height Lola Hendricks
Gloria Johnson-Powell Prathia Hall Florynce Kennedy Annie Lee Cooper Irene McCoy Gaines
Modjeska Monteith Simkins Irene Moorman Blackstone
Kathleen Neal Cleaver
Rosa Parks Jo Ann Robinson
Edythe Scott Bagley Patricia Stephens Due Marian Wright Edelman

21st century

See also

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