Unapologetically Trans
By Monica Roberts
Trust Black Women They are the base of the Democratic Party; now let’s elect them to lead it.
W
‹
e are fewer than 70 days away from the most important midterm election in our nation’s history. Anticipation is building as many polls predict that November 2018 will be much better for Democrats than the November 2016 election that gave us the ongoing train wreck that is the Trump misadministration. It is increasingly likely that Democrats will win control of the U.S. House of Representatives in November. The Senate, however, is a little tougher to gauge. While Democrats only need to pick up two Senate seats, they will also be defending 25, including several in red states like Montana, North Dakota, and Indiana. We’ll see what happens on November 6. One thing that has been a revelation to everyone except black America is that black women are undeniably the base of the Democratic Party. It was black women who nearly put Hillary Clinton in the White House, with 98 percent of them supporting her. African-American female votes also powered the blue electoral tsunami in Virginia last year, along with the upset that resulted in Doug Jones becoming the distinguished senator from Alabama instead of the reprehensible Roy Moore. The historic surge of black women running for office in 2018 has been powered in large part by the backlash to Trump’s shocking 2016 victory. With candidates like Georgia Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams, we are poised to make serious gains this year in terms of political representation. As I frequently like to point out, you cannot get liberal, progressive policies from conservative politicians. But it seems that the nation’s progressive movement still hasn’t learned that it must also trust and elect more black women—
The Struggle Continues Black female candidates on the ballot in November include, clockwise from top left, out lesbian Shannon Baldwin in Harris County, Ilhan Omar in Minnesota, Jahana Hayes in Connecticut, and Stacey Abrams in Georgia.
and black people in general. When I attended the Netroots Nation conference in New Orleans last month, black attendees were disgusted to hear a white keynote speaker bash “identity politics.” Democratic senator Bernie Sanders has made the same mistake by claiming that class is more important than race, and that the Democratic Party needs to get beyond identity politics. News flash for Bernie, and everyone else parroting that talking point: all politics in the U.S. is identity politics, and white progressive politicians need to stop river-dancing away from that fact. The Republicans have been pimping white grievance for political success since
30 | SEPTEMBER 2018 | OutSmartMagazine.com
the 1960s. That’s what fueled George Wallace’s presidential campaign in 1968, and it’s the major reason why Trump is now desecrating the Oval Office. The fact that 90 percent of legislators are white men has had deleterious effects on communities of color, and especially the black community. Our legislators are supposed to be representative of the people of this country and this state, so we need them to look more like America, not more like the white male slice of America. And if we want progressive policies like Medicare for All, student-loan-debt forgiveness, criminal-justice reform, reauthorization and ➝