Don’t Mistake Black Voter Turnout as Renewed Faith in the Democratic Party. Y’all Owe Us Bigly.

Nov 14, 2020 12:00:00 AM

by Tanesha Peeples

The presidential election had me so stressed that I had to run my ass across the border to the beaches and palm trees in Mexico to save my sanity. Thankfully by the time I’d landed, we had a new president-elect in Joe Biden and the first ever Black, female vice president-elect in Kamala Harris.

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I don’t think a lot of people understand how bad Black people were suffering under the Trump reign, which is why 87% of those of us who vote showed up to give his ass the boot.

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And to be clear, [pullquote]most politicians have never adequately represented or advocated for our needs[/pullquote], but Trump has made it abundantly clear that besides a few initiatives like Congress giving money to HBCUs and pardoning a few Black men from prison, he really doesn’t give a damn about us. But please don’t mistake our turnout for JoeMala as renewed faith in the Democratic party—y’all definitely owe us bigly.

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I gotta drag some skeletons out of the closet real quick. 

I’m not a person who holds someone’s past mistakes or policy stances against them because changes of hearts and minds do happen. But when those policies and inaction cause generational and communal harm, an apology alone isn’t enough—we need and deserve sincerity and restitution.

Ok, Biden apologized and admitted that some aspects of the 1994 crime bill that blew up mass incarceration—especially in the Black community—were a mistake and Harris regrets her involvement in past school truancy laws that led to parents being fined and jailed but we have to see and make them finally walk it like they talk it. Y’all should already know where I’m going with this—straight to education.

While on the campaign trail, Joe said that he would eliminate student loan debt for people who come from families making less than $125,000 a year. That’ll definitely help break links in the chain of generational poverty in Black communities. 

As a first generation college student who knows the struggle of only making $28,000 a year with Sallie Mae blowing my phone up every other hour with the expectation of me making monthly student loan payments of $650, I’m for this. I just wish this policy was retroactive for those of us who already have our degrees.

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But I’m feeling this even more so because higher education is the new poverty pimp in marginalized communities. 

I’m not at all anti-college but sending millions of Black kids to institutions of higher education when they’ve been underprepared and overall failed by “lower” education—the public K-12 system—is not only shitty, it’s a form of predatory lending that traps us with debt we ultimately can’t pay back and a loss on our investment.

And for those of us who do make it out, we often make less money than our white counterparts and are saddled with more student loan debt that we sometimes default on

https://twitter.com/TheBlackCaucus/status/1319299203307343878?s=20

So yeah, go ahead and make good on that pledge to ease student loan debt so the promise of prosperity yielded through education can be a reality for us, too.

We also want to see JoeMala choose a secretary of education who’s committed to providing a quality education for every child in America—someone that’s beholden to the greater well-being of students and not agendas that only serve their interests or that of the status quo. With that said, Randi Weingarten—President of the American Federation of Teachers—is an automatic “no” for me. 

There have been conversations about a few potential candidates and her name has come up. 

https://twitter.com/EdElect1/status/1326685852165156872?s=20

And listen, I don’t care how her professional resume reads. What we don’t need is anti-school choice (which is anti-parent choice), teachers union gatekeeper whose main priority is to protect educators that ain’t doing their damn job well—whether that be performance-wise or in doing a disservice to Black kids because they can’t see past their personal prejudices.  

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We need someone that truly understands the plight of public education and has been or is currently connected to the communities that are most impacted, a leader that promotes and enforces equity, understands the necessity of and is intentional about developing pathways for more teachers or color and so much more that would enhance the quality of education for Black kids. For me, Randi ain’t it.

Lastly, what would really make us Black people good with Kamala and Joe is if they finally started busting up this school-to-prison pipeline. 

VP-elect Harris has recently been very vocal about police violence against Black people. And while Biden has expressed he isn’t for defunding police, he has echoed similar sentiments in condemning brutality.

Look, I don’t care what they call the reallocation of funding from police and SROs in schools to programming and supports for traditionally marginalized students but, it’s a conversation school districts need to hear from our nation’s leaders in order to protect our most criminalized kids.  And also in disrupting the school-to-prison pipeline, [pullquote]this administration would immediately need to remediate the damage Betsy DeVos did in reversing Obama-Era discipline guidelines.[/pullquote]

D.C. tyranny may be on life support, but traditional American politics are still alive and well. Black people have carried Democrats to victory time and time again and as soon as they cross, we get left in the dust. 

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If we’re making history in giving Joe Biden the most votes ever received by a presidential candidate and Kamala Harris being the first woman and woman of color as vice president, then let’s keep this energy going in being one of the few times in Black American history that we get what we need and want from this country and party whose false claim to fame and office has been representing the 99%.

Tanesha Peeples

Tanesha Peeples is driven by one question in her work—“If not me, then who?” As the former Deputy Director of Activist Development for brightbeam, Tanesha merges the worlds of communications and grassroots activism to push for change in the public education system. Her passion for community and relentless mission for justice and liberation drive her in uplifting and amplifying the voices and advocacy of those that are often ignored. Tanesha wholeheartedly believes that education is the foundation for success. Her grand vision is one where everyone—regardless of ethnicity, socioeconomic status, gender or ZIP code—can have access to a comfortable quality of life and enjoy the freedoms and liberties promised to all Americans. And that's what she works towards every day.

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