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The Fight for What is Possible
"DeRay Mckesson says he 'challenged
the status quo of Baltimore’s politics',
and in many ways he did. He and his
team took the pain of the Freddie Gray
murder and turned it into the power
of a galvanizing campaign."
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Black
Lives Matter activist DeRay Mckesson deserves high props. The
young man used his activism as a platform to run for Mayor of
Baltimore, and he placed better than expected in the April 26
election. Initially projected to get just one percent of the
votes, he ended up with two percent, or 3077 votes. That’s a
miniscule number when compared to the more than 45,000 votes garnered
by State Senator Catherine Pugh, the winner with 37 percent of the
votes, or with the 42,000 plus votes (34 percent) scored by her key
challenger, former Mayor Sheila Dixon. Mckesson placed sixth,
which isn’t bad for someone who entered the race last (in February) and
without prior political experience. He is to be congratulated,
and encouraged to continue participating in electoral politics.
Social change happens from both inside and outside. Inside,
legislators and leaders make public policy that heralds change, albeit
slowly and imperfectly. We all might have liked an Affordable
Care Act, for example, that looked more like universal health care, but
the legislative process of compromise left folks out. The
legislative process is, by necessity, a compromising process where
people rarely get everything they want.
On the other hand, from the outside, people can yell, scream, march,
write, and influences. From the outside, the practicalities of
legislation aren’t especially relevant. Outside protesters are
trying to get attention. They count on legislators to respond to
their protest song by paying attention to their issues and legislating
them. That’s why I was just a bit chagrined when President Obama
told the Black Lives Matter folks to stop yelling. Yelling is
their job. His job is to translate their yelling to change, if he
so chooses.
The Black Lives Matter folks have been instrumental in this
Presidential campaign in forcing Democrats Hillary Clinton and Bernie
Sanders to deal with race in ways they might not have. Neither of
them has gone far enough, although both have conceded some attention to
reparations issues, and talked more explicitly about racial economic
justice.
DeRay Mckesson says he “challenged the status quo of Baltimore’s
politics”, and in many ways he did. He and his team took the pain
of the Freddie Gray murder and turned it into the power of a
galvanizing campaign. His scant 3077 votes (with 99 percent of
the votes counted) underestimate the impact of his race in that his
race is empowering for other young people. Especially young people who
are considering electoral politics, and his race establishes him as a
meaningful voice in Baltimore politics. Presumptive Mayor
Catherine Pugh should figure out a way to use his talents (perhaps on
the Police Commission) as Baltimore continues to heal.
"While we did not win tonight, what we did was very important, and I
want you to be as proud of our work together as I am," Mckesson wrote
to his supporters. "We did something very special, and it sets the
table for what else is possible." Almost anything is possible for
Mckesson and the Black Lives Matter activists. It is my hope that
these activists connect the immediate reality of anti-black violence in
law enforcement with the more systemic reality of structural anti-black
violence that manifests itself through economic oppression, political
subjugation, and social inequality. In the United States,
this violence demonstrates through income, wealth and unemployment
gaps, through voter suppression and biased laws, and through
microaggression. The extent of the violence is clouded by the
myth of postracialism. Even with an African American president
activists needed to assert that #Black Lives Matter because the Obama
presidency offered no protection for Tamir Rice, Eric Garner, Michael
Brown and so many others. The myth of postracialism is
insufficient to quell structural and persistent anti-black violence.
Hopefully Mckesson will not be the last Black Lives Matter activist to
involve himself in electoral politics. This 2016 Presidential
season has been great in illustrating some of the shortcomings of our
electoral system, but also some of its strengths. That Bernie
Sanders could enter a race with just a 3 percent approval rating and
amass a war chest $27 at a time is amazing. That he could
seriously rival the presumptive front-runner and push her agenda to the
left is commendable. That DeRay Mckesson could go from outside
agitator to inside candidate is a measure of what is possible.
Imagine what would happen if there were more voter participation, if
more people understood the complementarity of inside and outside
approaches.
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BC Editorial Board Member Dr. Julianne Malveaux, PhD (JulianneMalveaux.com)
is the Honorary Co-Chair of the Social Action Commission of Delta Sigma
Theta Sorority, Incorporated and serves on the boards of the Economic
Policy Institute as well as The Recreation Wish List Committee of
Washington, DC. A native San Franciscan, she is the President and
owner of Economic Education a 501 c-3 non-profit headquartered in
Washington, D.C. During her time as the 15th President of Bennett
College for Women, Dr. Malveaux was the architect of exciting and
innovative transformation at America’s oldest historically black
college for women. Contact Dr. Malveaux and BC. |
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is published every Thursday |
Executive Editor:
David A. Love, JD |
Managing Editor:
Nancy Littlefield, MBA |
Publisher:
Peter Gamble |
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