OPEN LETTER BY BLACK WOMEN LEADERS IN RESPONSE TO THE NARRATIVE SURROUNDING BLACK WOMEN NOMINEES FOR VICE PRESIDENT
Black women are many things. We are business executives, political strategists and elected officials, philanthropists, and activists. We are health and wellness practitioners. We are entertainers and faith leaders. We are wives, mothers, daughters, educators, and students. We set and shift culture. We build power and we are powerful.
We are the highest propensity voters in this nation. We are a coalition of Black women leaders, who, in this inflection point of the Black liberation movement, where people around the world are galvanized to action, know that the time for Black women in the United States is now.
Over the past few months in the media, we have witnessed many Black women put forth as potential Vice Presidential candidates including former gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, Congresswoman Karen Bass, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, Sen. Kamala Harris, Congresswoman Val Demings, and former US Ambassador Susan Rice, be publicly critiqued.
We have also watched many of these highly-credentialed women be disrespected in the media over the last few weeks.
Regardless of your political affiliation, whether it’s the media, members of the vice presidential vetting committee, a former governor, a top political donor, or a small town mayor: We are not your Aunt Jemimas. The use of the racist myth of a happy, Black servant portrayed as a happy domestic worker loyal to her White employer is not lost on us. While some of the relentless attacks on Black women and our leadership abilities have been more suggestive than others, make no mistake – -we are qualified and ambitious without remorse.
We are servant leaders – motivated by a desire to uplift and advance our communities and nation. And we will not tolerate racist or sexist tropes consistently utilized in an effort to undermine our power. No matter who you are supporting for vice president, you should be equally outraged by the blatant disrespect of Black women.
Black women have been and remain vital across sectors. We are indebted to women like Ella Baker, Septima Clarke, Shirley Chisholm, Angela Davis, Fannie Lou Hamer, Barbara Jordan, Ruby Doris Robinson, and Ida B. Wells just to name a few. These women have fought to move us forward and are collectively responsible for much of this country’s progress. Black women have been leading, and we must honor, protect, support, and uplift them.
Aimee Allison
Angela Angel
Shavon Arline-Bradley
Raymone Bain
Cora Masters Barry
Julie A. Bayley
Jacqueline L. Bazan
Nadja Bellan-White
Cheryl Benton
Talia Boone
Karen Boykin-Towns
Rhonda Briggins
Roslyn Brock Clayola
Brown Dy Brown
LaTosha Brown
Erin Broyard-Stennis
Cassandra Butcher
Valeisha Butterfield Jones
Melanie Campbell
Yolanda Caraway
Glynda Carr
Lynette Castille-Hall
Candi Castleberry
Emmalesha Christman
Reecie Colbert
Dr. Johnnetta
Betsch Cole
Maurita Coley
Christina Cue
Maya R. Cummings
The Reverend
Leah D. Daughtry
Marilyn Davis
Suzanne DePasse
Tara DeVeaux
Michelle Dubois
Dr. Hazel N. Dukes
Jotaka L. Eaddy
Lenora Abraham Eaddy
Sonya Ede-Williams
Phaedra Ellis-Lamkins
Heather Foster
Michelle GadsonWilliams
A’shanti Gholar
Monique Gilliam
Amy R. Goldson
Trudy Grant
Nicole Grayson
Linda Mercado
Greene
Mamee Groves
Joyce Harley
Kynderly Haskins
Kristi Henderson
Holli Holiday
Tamara Houston
Ifeoma Ike, Esq.
Amy Elisa Jackson
Debbie Jarvis
Keisha Sutton
James Michelle
Jawando Marissa
Jennings Star Jones
Suzanne Kay
Niija Kuykendall
Dr. Nicol Turner
Lee L. Toni Lewis, MD
Peggy Lewis
Jeanine Liburd
Chanceé Lundy
Dee Marshall
Zola Mashariki
Bre Maxwell
Flo McAfee
Alexis Mitchell
Minyon Moore
Laura Murphy
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