Toronto Star

George Floyd’s brother rallies voters on election day

After summer of protest, supporters urged to cast votes for racial justice

- AARON MORRISON

NEW YORK— The murmurs spread quickly among the poll workers late Tuesday morning at a Brooklyn neighbourh­ood station: George Floyd’s brother was present.

A few came up to Terrence Floyd, whose brother George died in the custody of Minneapoli­s police, sparking protests for racial justice across the nation. “Keep the fight going,” one Black woman urged. Others asked to take their photos with Terrence.

Since the death of his older brother on May 25, Terrence has been thrust into a spotlight he did not seek. A 42-year-old school bus driver in New York, Terrence is normally a quiet man, deeply attached to his three children. But now, he feels under constant pressure to relay his brother’s voice — especially on this election day, when, as he sees it, race and racial justice are on the ballot.

“Ever since then, I’ve felt like he was talking to me,” he says of George’s death. “He was saying, ‘Little bro, just speak for me. Walk for me. Love for me. Get these people to understand what happened to me can happen to anybody.’ ”

On Tuesday, Terrence’s black hoodie and face mask included the words “I can’t breathe,” “Justice for George,” and “8:46,” the number of minutes and seconds authoritie­s initially said a white officer held a knee to his brother’s neck until he became unresponsi­ve.

After famously urging calm as anger spilled onto the streets over his brother’s death, Terrence planned to spend election say following up on a less-noticed part of his emotional plea to protesters: please vote.

The names George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery and Rayshard Brooks, all killed by police or vigilantes, re-energized the Black Lives Matter movement this year and put race and justice at the centre of the election. As voting wraps up coast to coast, their loved ones awaited signs that their public grief and loss of anonymity weren’t in vain.

Former vice-president Joe Biden has promised racial justice and reforms, while President Donald Trump has stuck to a stern “law and order” rhetoric. After a summer of protests, about half of voters call racism a “very serious” problem in U.S. society, AP polling found. But compared with the pandemic and the economy, relatively few voters — about one in 10 — deemed racism or law enforcemen­t the country’s top issue, the poll found.

The Floyd family has reached out on behalf of Biden’s campaign. On Sunday, Terrence joined his sister, Bridgett Floyd, and other family members for a rally with Jill Biden in Tallahasse­e, Fla. Last month, Bridgett appeared in a campaign ad for Joe Biden.

Like all of America, Terrence was anxious on Tuesday.

“Tuesday is so important,” said the Rev. Nicolas O’Rourke, the Pennsylvan­ia organizing director for the Working Families Party, which focuses on systemic racism. Philadelph­ia became a hot spot in the wake of the fatal police shooting of Walter Wallace Jr., a Black man whose family members had requested mental crisis interventi­on on Oct. 26. “While communitie­s are at varying points on the reform spectrum … it’s pretty clear there is a unilateral agreement that something needs to shift,” he said.

By early afternoon, Terrence, along with his attorney Sanford Rubenstein and civil rights activist Kevin McCall, were driving around Brooklyn looking for potential voters, with a loudspeake­r and a microphone in their SUV. But there were no lines at a handful of schools and community centres.

Perhaps most people had already voted early, Terrence thought. And hoped. Maybe they had already heeded the message about the importance of voting.

 ?? FRANK FRANKLIN II THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Terrence Floyd, brother of George Floyd, speaks at a Get Out the Vote rally in New York on Tuesday.
FRANK FRANKLIN II THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Terrence Floyd, brother of George Floyd, speaks at a Get Out the Vote rally in New York on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada