Black Women, our vote matters!

Black Women can change the world, which means we can change elections outcomes too.  With that power comes significant responsibility, and we should take that work seriously as the election of 2018 approaches.

Since the conceptualization of this country, black women have played an important role in every major American milestone.  We have allowed the strength of the nation to be built on our endurance without regard to our aptitude, and now is time for us to stand in the fullness of our power.

The beauty of maneuvering as a black female is diluted by the disenfranchisement that exists in both our political process, and in the political and private policies that work to diminish our voices. The policies that cause us to not live our full lives were  created, and continue to be sustained, by people and entities that do not see us as full human beings.

If we are ever going to change those policies, we must first throw out  the policymakers.

But we have a tricky relationship with the one party that sometimes does our bidding. The Democratic party calls on us, Black Women, to provide solutions to the issues concerning all the American populous. They rely on our votes to get into, and stay in, office. We do this service for the party, but in return,, we rarely see real solutions for the issues that directly affect us and our families.

Often times, the specific issues that make it difficult to navigate society in a black feminine body are not bifurcated from our white female counterparts.  This creates a false narrative that we are being acknowledged and heard. As Black Women, We have a duality to overcome..our race and our gender.

The history of Black women in America is one of power, juxtaposed with constant disenfranchisement. The ratification of the Constitution granted discretion to individual states on how to qualify voters.  When the south lost the Civil War, three Reconstruction Amendments were ratified and limited this discretion. The 13th and 14th amendments abolished slavery and granted citizenship respectively.  The Fifteenth Amendment (1870) provides the right to vote regardless of “race, color, or previous condition of servitude.”After extensive advocacy, white women were granted the right to vote on May 19, 1919.  The suffrage movement disregarded Jim Crow laws ruling the South, not to mention the incessant intimidation and economic disparities that the black women who marched with them faced. It wasn’t until the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed that black women could finally participate in the electoral process.  

The reason that dissenters spent so much time and effort preventing the black female community from voting and continue to create systems that make voting difficult is because they know how powerful our vote is.  According to the Washington Post, in 2008 and 2012, black women voted at a higher rate than any other group. Four years ago, 74 percent of eligible black women went to the polls — and 96 percent voted for President Obama.  

We have a duty not only to our children and community, we have a duty to ourselves.  We have a right to live not only within the freedom that is granted to us by the Constitution, we have a right to live within the freedom granted by our mere existence.  Our power is real, because our voting power will change the world. We can talk about getting free; but nothing will change until we vote.

 

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