Remarkable Inclusion Of Black Women Running For Congress In The United States

by Duchess Magazine
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A great number of Black women have put their keen interests into vying for Congress, in what has become an increasing trend.

According to Reuters, at least 122 Black or multi-racial women have filed to run for congressional seats in this year’s election in the United States. That number has risen significantly from 48 in 2012, the Center for American Women and Politics said.

Almost 60 of those women are still in the running as the primary season draws to a close.

“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,” Pam Keith, a Navy veteran and attorney also running told Reuters.

The Center for Women and Politics and Higher Heights for America, released a report showing Black women only make up 8% of the U.S. population, but 4.3% of Congress.

Despite the low number of representation, Black women make up the highest participation rate of any group voting in the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections.

Black women who have run for office typically win majority-Black districts, however, many running in this cycle are in majority-white or mixed districts, including some who have voted for Republicans in the past.

“We’re going to flip this seat from red to blue,” 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 told Reuters. “We have a candidate that knows and understands the district and its people.”

Reuters talked to eight black women who are congressional candidates, and believe they can relate to voters better than their often wealthier opponents, because they, too, have lived through financial hardships. The coronavirus crisis has also helped some candidates as its highlighted some of the issues they’re running on, including improving healthcare, creating better jobs, improving 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, Alabama’s Adia McClellan-Winfrey, a psychologist and chair of the Talladega County Democratic Party said.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden is considering several Black woman for his vice president including Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA), voting rights advocate Stacey Abrams and Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms. Biden’s campaign manager Karine Jean-Pierre is also a Black woman.

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