The
116th Congress, sworn in on January 3, is the most diverse our nation
has ever seen. There are more women – 102 – than ever
before. More members of the Congressional Black Caucus – 55 –
than ever before. Indeed, a former Congressional Black Caucus
intern, Lauren Underwood (D-IL) is part of the incoming first-year
class. At 32, she is the youngest Black woman to serve. This
Congress includes the first Native American woman, two Muslim women,
openly gay representatives, and others. Much of this diversity was
displayed at the ceremonial swearing-in of the Congressional Black
Caucus, an inspirational event that preceded the official swearing-in
on Capitol Hill. There, as I listened to speeches by the top
Congressional Democrats – incoming speaker Nancy Pelosi (CA),
incoming Majority leader Steny Hoyer (MD), and incoming Whip James
Clyburn (SC), I was awash in hope and optimism. These leaders, along
with outgoing Congressional Black Caucus Chairman Cedric Richmond
(LA) and incoming Chair Karen Bass (CA) spoke of challenge, struggle,
and optimism and focused on possibilities.
As
I listened to them I could not help but think of the poet Langston
Hughes, and his poem Let America Be America Again. Written in 1935,
the poem was first published in Esquire Magazine in 1936. Though
Hughes did not consider it one of his favorites, it captures the
duality of our nation, the marked difference between our nation’s
soaring establishing rhetoric and the stark reality that many
experience. In the words of Malcolm X, it is the difference between
the American dream and the American nightmare. Here is what Langston
Hughes writes in his poem:
“Let
America be America again. Let it be the dream it used to be. Let it
be the pioneer on the plain Seeking a home where he himself is free.
(America never was America to me.) Let America be the dream the
dreamers dreamed— Let it be that great strong land of love
Where never kings connive nor tyrants scheme That any man be crushed
by one above. (It never was America to me.) O, let my land be a
land where Liberty Is crowned with no false patriotic wreath, But
opportunity is real, and life is free, Equality is in the air we
breathe.”
(There’s never been equality
for me, Nor freedom in this “homeland of the free.”)
No
freedom in this homeland of the free, but this Congress offers
freedom possibilities. It offers the possibility of fixing the Voting
Rights Act, even as the Supreme Court has attempted to erode voting
rights, even as at least two elections were stolen in 2018, those of
Stacey Abrams in Georgia and Andrew Gillum in Florida. This Congress
offers freedom possibilities in resisting the insanity of a “wall”
that the Great Negotiator (and purported author of The Art of the
Deal) swore that Mexico was paying for. Not. This Congress offers
freedom possibilities in its efforts to preserve the Affordable
Health Care Act and to move us to Medicare for all. This colorful
Congress (the pictures tell it all) offers a sharp contrast to the
dismal (as in grey and navy suits) set of Republicans, overwhelmingly
white and male, and overwhelmingly staid.
It’s
not about MAGA (Make America Great Again), it's about MAF, or Make
America Fair. This is what Congressman James Clyburn shared when he
spoke at the ceremonial swearing-in. He opened with the words of
French historian Alexis Tocqueville, who observed when visiting this
country: “the greatness of America lies not in being more
enlightened than any other nation, but rather in her ability to
repair her faults.” Clyburn went on to list the many ways our
nation has attempted to self-correct, from the passage of the
Emancipation Proclamation to the Supreme Court Brown v. Board of
Education decision declaring “separate but equal” to be
“inherently unequal.” Clyburn talked about the Great
Society legislation, another of our nation’s attempts at
self-repair, and he concluded by saying that, “America does not
need to be made great again, she is already great. Our challenge is
to make that greatness apply fairly and equitably to all of our
citizens”.
Can
this diverse new Congress make our nation fair for many who have
never experienced our nation in the way it is supposed to be? In the
words of Langston Hughes, “It never was America to me.”
We’ve come a long way since he wrote his 1935 poem, but we
still have so much to do. After these last two dystopian years under
the leadership of President Genital Grabber (let’s just call
him GG), this new Congress offers us many possibilities. May they
manifest!
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