FIXTURESNo upcoming fixtures — check back soon.
FORUM / MIKES GRIPES /  ‘It should have been long ago’: majority-Black US city elects first Black officials

‘It should have been long ago’: majority-Black US city elects first Black officials

Started by Denny9 REPLIES725 VIEWS· 27 Aug 2020, 03:08
SHAREXFACEBOOKWHATSAPPTELEGRAMREDDITLINKEDIN
DE
DennyCaptain12,893 posts
27 Aug 2020, 03:08
#1
27 Aug 2020, 03:08#1

Pleasant Grove, a small Alabama city outside of Birmingham, made history Tuesday by electing a majority-Black city council. The city, which is nearly 60% Black, had never previously elected a Black candidate to the city council.

Tuesday’s election was the first after the city settled a 2018 lawsuit filed under the Voting Rights Act, the landmark 1965 civil rights law, and agreed to change its system for holding elections. The city had long allowed all residents of the city to vote for all the city council members, regardless of where they lived, allowing white voters to cast their ballots in a cohesive bloc that blocked Black candidates from winning elections. Similar practices, often called “at-large elections”, had long been used throughout Alabama to block African Americans from gaining political power at the local level.

Black residents there told the Guardian in February they felt shut out from the town’s all-white city council. Late last year, Pleasant Grove agreed to settle the case and adopted a new election method called cumulative voting, in which each eligible voter gets five votes they can allocate however they want among candidates.

Yolanda Lawson, a longtime Black resident of Pleasant Grove who lost her election when she ran in 2016, was elected to the city council on Tuesday. Kevin “KD” Dunn and Ray Lassiter are the other two candidates who won. There were long lines at the polls to vote on Tuesday, and some voters were erroneously told they would not be able to vote even though they were in line when the polls closed , according to al.com.

In 2016, when Lawson ran for city council, she faced attacks on social media that she was an outsider to the city, even though she lived in the city for decades. She said she wanted to run again because she still felt like she had something to offer to improve the city.

“It definitely means being part of history. But it also means being part of what I hope will be part of a transparent government that wants to move our city forward,” she said. “To me, it’s more about just being elected to represent the underrepresented.”

Priscilla McWilliams is the only Black person to ever serve on the Pleasant Grove city council. She was appointed to a seat 2014 but lost when she ran for her seat in 2016, said she was thrilled by the results on Tuesday.

“It is outstanding, I am overwhelmed. I am ecstatic to have African Americans be a part of the city’s government,” she said. “I wasn’t expecting it this quickly, but I knew it was coming. It should have been long ago, but I’m glad it’s here now.”

Jerry Brasseale, the city’s mayor since 1992, also nearly lost his re-election to Robert Sellers, a Black challenger. Brasseale won the election by just 40 votes.

Tuesday’s election is evidence that the Voting Rights Act was not outdated said Deuel Ross, an attorney with the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, which represented the plaintiffs in the case.

“It shows why the voting rights act is absolutely still necessary,” he said. “It’s only after the Voting Rights Act was used in 2020 that people are finally able to have some representation in their city and local governments.

“Black people are obviously, and others, are standing up in a way that we haven’t in 50 years,” he added. “Anything that gives people more of a voice in their local government, where a lot of these decision s about funding, policing, schools are being made is great news.”

BLM

PL
PlumCaptain21,007 posts
27 Aug 2020, 08:07
#2
27 Aug 2020, 08:07#2

Yaaaaaaaaay

Now give us your thoughts on marxisM and compelling people to bow before it.

Ok bye bye now

CH
ChippoPro3,372 posts
27 Aug 2020, 13:54
#3
27 Aug 2020, 13:54#3

we can commemorate this wonderful achievement by referring to it as "Black Tuesday".

This makes one wonder why a majority black city has never voted for a majority black city council.

DB
DbDraadCaptain26,388 posts
27 Aug 2020, 17:47
#4
27 Aug 2020, 17:47#4

"This makes one wonder why a majority black city has never voted for a majority black city council."

Indeed, the article don't really explain exactly what prevented this in the past, nor why race is somehow a deciding factor in selecting officials....somehow, during the last 12 years, the whole world took a few steps back when it comes to racial issues...and some are deliberately stoking the furnace...wonder why.?

CH
ChippoPro3,372 posts
27 Aug 2020, 21:19
#5
27 Aug 2020, 21:19#5

"and some are deliberately stoking the furnace...wonder why."

you mean like Denny?

Though I'm not sure if he thinks he is white or black.

AJ
AJHPro3,183 posts
28 Aug 2020, 01:48
#6
28 Aug 2020, 01:48#6

Some folks have a hidden agenda that is stoked by their experiences from years ago.

Read the posting again and then note the poster.

Often wonder why he just doesn't just back up and go back home as the whites are not in charge any longer the true original African occupants of all of South Africa are!

Surely he will fit in with the masses and all will be well.

Black rule throughout the country...what more could you ask and wish for.

He will find employment, stay anywhere he wants to, go anywhere, and feel safe and secure, but unable to watch any rugby at Newlands.

Baltimore, Chicago, Detriot, Seattle, Portland and were also at one stage great cities.

Guess what changed all that?

Yep, you guessed correctly, Trump, Police, Churches, and the White Folks.

Nah it's safer under law and order on the big island.

We cannot change history but we can ensure our futures.

FOUR MORE YEARS.


DE
DennyCaptain12,893 posts
28 Aug 2020, 03:04
#7
28 Aug 2020, 03:04#7

Oh look, It's Fartur, the unashamed racist who hotfooted it to Canada just before the collapse of Apartheid. Couldn't get out of good old South Africa quick enough could you, Fartur.  All of your privileges were about to dry up, Huh? 

Now pull your head in, outside of South Africa you're a nobody, no-one gives a fairy floss about your white skin. And cut the tough talking image, everyone knows how you flounced off this forum multiple times, for all your bluster you're a weak "man." I even felt sorry for you, it's always sad to see a grown man cry.  



PL
PlumCaptain21,007 posts
28 Aug 2020, 07:25
#8
28 Aug 2020, 07:25#8

To sum Denny up one has to understand the mentality of mundane middle-aged melancholy.

See, some people do not gracefully reach the point where they realise the whisp-like nature of human life. They begin to feel unbearably light

Here is where stronger people are able to lean on accumulated experience and knowledge in order to attain relevance and meaning. A place where understanding of the universe and appreciation for life should deepen to virtually spiritual levels. A transition through physical, mental and finally spiritual.

The weak minded need to go back to crimes of the past and rekindle their feelings of being a victim, then rely on the gravity of that to feel alive and like they matter.

The cringe is almost unbearable as one reads the posts signed off simply with...

"BLM"

Like a teenager scribbling the name of his favorite band on his school bag because the world MUST know how "deep" he is.

The pseudo activism, childish rebeliousness and the self-perceived infamy that the writer(Denny) thinks it inspires is truly vomit inducing.

AJ
AJHPro3,183 posts
28 Aug 2020, 17:04
#9
28 Aug 2020, 17:04#9

Shame you lost soul.

You need help.

Could be too late I'm afraid.

AJ
AJHPro3,183 posts
04 Sept 2020, 16:55
#10
04 Sept 2020, 16:55#10

Plum pleased you picked up on my message about reading the original posting and then note the poster.

Your reply captured my thoughts exactly.


— END OF THREAD —

More from Mikes Gripes