General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMeet 18 Candidates Leading the Historic Rise of Black Women Running for Office in Alabama
Before Black Panther celebrated the all-female freedom fighters of Wakanda, real-life black women formed their own type of special-forces unit in Alabama. When a whopping 98 percent of African American women voters united behind Doug Jones, they were able to elect him as the first Democrat to represent Alabama in the U.S. Senate in more than 20 years. They didnt just defeat Roy Moore; they rocked the political status quo.
They have no intention of stopping there.
An unprecedented groundswell of at least 70 black women have launched electoral campaigns across Alabama for local, state, and national offices in 2018, according to the nonprofit Emerge America, which trains women to run for office. While this echoes a national trend (the Black Women in Politics database lists 590 black female candidates across the country, 97 of them for federal seats), experts say the numbers in Alabama are particularly striking. From first-time hopefuls to seasoned veterans, twenty-somethings to sixty-somethings, women are lining up to disrupt the mostly white, mostly Republican old boys club in the state. (Only two black women are running as Republicans in Alabama this year, both for local seats, according to the states GOP office.) African Americans are a quarter of the population here, yet they arent seeing their issues front and center, says Rhonda Briggins, a cofounder of VoteRunLead and an Alabama native, so theyve decided to run themselves.
Representative Terri Sewell, 53, whos up for reelection this year, was the first black woman to represent Alabama in Congress when she was elected in 2011. As a congressional intern during the late eighties, I remember walking the halls of the Capitol and not seeing many black women in any role, let alone as elected officials, she says. When I was first elected, making my voice heard as a black woman surrounded by older white men was a challenge. This year were proving the strength of our voice at the ballot box.
https://www.glamour.com/story/black-women-running-alabama-midterms
saidsimplesimon
(7,888 posts)thanks RandySF. IMHO, we spend a lot of time on negative stories.
It is more uplifting to hear: This year were proving the strength of our voice at the ballot box.