• News
  • Sport
  • TV
  • Radio
  • Education
  • TV Licences
  • Contact Us
  • SOUTH AFRICA
  • POLITICS
  • BUSINESS
  • SPORT
  • AFRICA
  • WORLD
  • FEATURES
  • OPINION
No Result
View All Result
1
Home World

Record number of Black women set to run for US Congress

27 July 2020, 4:37 PM  |
Reuters Reuters |  @SABCNews
Joyce Elliot, a Democratic US congressional candidate for Arkansas' 2nd district (AR-02) which represents Little Rock and the surrounding areas, works from her office in Little Rock, Arkansas, US, on July 20, 2020.

Joyce Elliot, a Democratic US congressional candidate for Arkansas' 2nd district (AR-02) which represents Little Rock and the surrounding areas, works from her office in Little Rock, Arkansas, US, on July 20, 2020.

Image: Reuters

Joyce Elliot, a Democratic US congressional candidate for Arkansas' 2nd district (AR-02) which represents Little Rock and the surrounding areas, works from her office in Little Rock, Arkansas, US, on July 20, 2020.

Joyce Elliott, an Arkansas state senator who is seeking a US congressional seat in November, was the second Black student to attend her local public high school; the first was her older sister. If elected in November, she will be the first Black lawmaker in Congress from Arkansas, ever.

On the campaign trail in June, Elliott attended a demonstration against racism in White County, which is more than 90% white, and spoke to attendees in the shadow of a Confederate monument.

The November election is a “chance to change our history,” she told Reuters afterward. “I really decided I needed to run because I could see a pathway to winning.”

As the United States grapples with a deadly coronavirus pandemic that has disproportionately sickened and killed Black Americans and recent upheaval over police brutality, a record number of Black women are running for Congress.

Elliott is one of at least 122 Black or multi-racial Black women who filed to run for congressional seats in this year’s election; this figure has increased steadily since 2012, when it was 48, according to the Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP).

As primary season draws to a close, nearly 60 Black women are still in the running, according to Collective PAC.

“People are becoming more comfortable with seeing different kinds of people in Congress. You don’t know what it looks like to have powerful Black women in Congress until you see powerful Black women in Congress,” said Pam Keith, a Navy veteran and attorney who is running in the Democratic primary for a Florida congressional seat.

Black women are nearly 8% of the US population, but 4.3% of Congress, according to a report here by the Centre of Women and Politics and Higher Heights for America, a political action committee that seeks to elect more progressive Black women to elected office. They are underrepresented in statewide executive’s jobs and among mayors as well, according to the report.

But Black women voters showed the highest participation rate here of any group in the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections.

Historically, Black women have been more likely here to win in majority-Black districts, but many are running this cycle in majority white or mixed districts, some of which had previously voted for Republicans.

“We’re going to flip this seat from red to blue,” said North Carolina’s Patricia Timmons-Goodson, the first Black judge to serve on the state Supreme Court and a former member of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission. “We have a candidate that knows and understands the district and its people,” said Timmons-Goodson, who is running for a seat in Congress.

Several of the eight Black women congressional candidates Reuters spoke to said they relate to voters better than their often wealthier opponents, because they, too, have lived through fiscal hardships.

“We almost lost our house a couple of times. We ran into financial difficulties when I was first starting my business,” said Jeannine Lee Lake, a former journalist who is running for Congress from Indiana against US Vice President Mike Pence’s brother, Greg Pence, an incumbent business executive who reported here millions in assets last election cycle.

The coronavirus crisis has also highlighted the importance of issues these women are running on – improving healthcare, creating better jobs, ameliorating access to broadband internet.

“It really has just amplified and co-signed what I was already talking about with voters,” such as the importance of agriculture and expanding Medicaid, said Alabama’s Adia McClellan-Winfrey, a psychologist and chair of the Talladega County Democratic Party.

Ohio candidate Desiree Tims returned home in 2019 after a stint in Washington, D.C. as a congressional aide and White House intern, intending to work at a law firm and pay down her student loan debt.

But she decided to run after watching people come together to bag clothes, share food and provide shelter following a rash of tornadoes that tore across the state, with little support from the federal government.

“After coming back from Washington, D.C., what I saw was the community doing the work, but their tax dollars not working for them,” Tims said.

Kimberly Walker, a veteran and former corrections officer from Florida running for Congress, says the solution to that discrepancy is clear.

“We need to have more people, average, everyday American citizens who are there fighting for average, everyday American citizens,” she said.

Share article
Tags: CongressArkansasBlack women
Previous Post

At least 25 people arrested after Cape Peninsula protests

Next Post

Dabengwa resigns from the Eskom board over tender disagreement

Related Posts

FILE PHOTO: Rescuers search for survivors following an earthquake in Diyarbakir, Turkey February 6, 2023.

Donors pledge 7 billion euros to help rebuild Turkey from earthquake

20 March 2023, 8:41 PM
Former US president Donald Trump at the Greater Columbus Convention Center in Columbus.

Witness may challenge Michael Cohen claims in Trump case

20 March 2023, 8:53 AM
France's President Emmanuel Macron attends a plenary session during G7 summit in Carbis Bay, Cornwall, Britain, June 13, 2021. REUTERS/Phil Noble/Pool

France’s Macron faces another test with parliamentary votes on Monday

19 March 2023, 8:00 PM
[File image] Water being poured into a container.

UN Water Conference in a generation kicks off in New York on Wednesday

19 March 2023, 6:20 PM
Vladimir Putin

Putin makes surprise trip to Russian-occupied Mariupol in wake of ICC warrant

19 March 2023, 3:09 PM
Former U.S. Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo  launched the U.S.-Qatar Strategic Dialogue with (from the left) Deputy Prime Minister bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, former Minister of Finance Al Emadi, former U.S. Secretary, Mike Pompeo, Secretary 
Steven Mnuchin
 and Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross in the US on September 14, 2020.

Qatar’s ex-finance minister Al-Emadi to face trial

19 March 2023, 1:49 PM
Next Post
Sifiso Dabengwa

Dabengwa resigns from the Eskom board over tender disagreement

Most Viewed

  • 24hrs
  • Week
  • Month
  • SABC News crew attacked on N2 while monitoring protests
  • NPA’s Andrew Breitenbach admits to leaking Zuma medical records to Maughan
  • BREAKING | EFF members arrested after clashes with police in Braamfontein Sunday night
  • WARNING | Graphic details: Mabopane businessman killed in a hail of bullets
  • EFF slams govt for heavy army deployment ahead of planned shutdown
  • Corporates prepare for a possible national blackout
  • Wits SRC sued
  • E-tolls permanently scrapped: Lesufi
  • Wits SRC president suspended
  • SABC News crew attacked on N2 while monitoring protests
  • SABC News crew attacked on N2 while monitoring protests
  • NPA’s Andrew Breitenbach admits to leaking Zuma medical records to Maughan
  • BREAKING | EFF members arrested after clashes with police in Braamfontein Sunday night
  • Our planned shutdown march will be peaceful: Saftu
  • ROLLING COVERAGE | National Shutdown

LATEST

Supporters of the Azimio La Umoja (Declaration of Unity) One Kenya Alliance clash with police during a nationwide protest over the cost of living and against Kenyan President William Ruto's government, in Nairobi, Kenya March 20, 2023.
  • Africa

Kenyan opposition politicians arrested, tear-gassed during protests


FILE PHOTO: Rescuers search for survivors following an earthquake in Diyarbakir, Turkey February 6, 2023.
  • World

Donors pledge 7 billion euros to help rebuild Turkey from earthquake


ATM leader Vuyolwethu Zungula, EFF's Julius Malema and Carl Niehaus during the National Shutdown.
  • National shutdown

Minimal reports of violence at EFF’s national shutdown protest


Throngs of National Shutdown protestors gather in Pretoria.
  • National shutdown
  • Politics

Today, you have made history – Malema to National Shutdown protestors


Graphic of a hand opposing racism.
  • Human Rights Day 2023
  • South Africa

South Africans must work together to eradicate racism: HSRC


Protestors taking part in the National Shutdown on the 20th of March 2023.
  • National shutdown
  • Politics

Afriforum labels EFF’s National Shutdown a ‘spectacular failure’


Weather

  • About the SABC
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
  • Advertise
  • Disclaimer
  • Site Map

SABC © 2023

No Result
View All Result
  • SOUTH AFRICA
  • POLITICS
  • BUSINESS
  • SPORT
  • AFRICA
  • WORLD
  • FEATURES
  • OPINION

© 2023

Previous At least 25 people arrested after Cape Peninsula protests
Next Sifiso Dabengwa Dabengwa resigns from the Eskom board over tender disagreement