Chattanooga Times Free Press

Black organizati­ons across Georgia put in the work to turn state blue

- BY ERNIE SUGGS

ATLANTA — In the months before the Rev. Joseph Lowery died, Helen Butler sat down with him to talk about the organizati­on that he created and she now runs — the Georgia Coalition for the Peoples’ Agenda.

In preparatio­n for the November election, Butler had already opened seven offices across the state aimed at mobilizing Black voters. Lowery, her friend and mentor, was looking forward to the day when the Peoples’ Agenda would have offices in each of Georgia’s 14 congressio­nal districts.

“He was very proud of the work that we were doing,” Butler said of the civil rights legend, who died in March. “And he would be proud of people and proud of what is happening in Georgia now. He wanted people to exercise their rights and never give up.”

Butler is part of a growing and now powerful coalition of Black leaders and voters who appear to have helped Georgia swing blue in last week’s presidenti­al election. That hasn’t happened since Bill Clinton took the White House in 1992.

Though the votes are still being tallied, and plans for a Georgia recount already have been announced, the numbers

right now show Black voters in the country supported Joe Biden at an 87% clip, more than any other racial group, by far.

“Black people saved America from Jefferson Davis and now Donald Trump,” civil rights activist Jesse Jackson told The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution.

And now, as Georgia barrels toward two runoffs that will decide who controls the U. S. Senate, Black voters will become even more important.

“We put in a lot of hard work and that hard work is reaping the rewards,” said John Jackson, chairman of the DeKalb County Democratic Party, the first Black man to hold that position. “Georgia cannot flip without a reasonable turnout from the Black community.”

While Trump was able to peel some Black voters away from the Democratic Party, urban centers such as Atlanta, Milwaukee, Detroit and Philadelph­ia propelled Biden to the White House.

In addition, Georgia’s Black voters were instrument­al in getting the Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff into senatorial runoffs and sending Lucy McBath back to Congress. She’ll be joined by Nikema Williams, who was elected to succeed the late John Lewis in the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

“Black voters have seen their power in this election,” Williams said. “Once the final votes are tallied, the world will see that power. Black people have always wanted to be engaged in the process.”

Since at least 2018, organizati­ons such as the Peoples’ Agenda, Stacey Abrams’ Fair Fight‚ Black Voters Matter, the New Georgia Project and even “Get Your Booty to the Poll,” a campaign that rose out of Atlanta strip clubs, have been fighting against voter suppressio­n and to increase the voter rolls, especially for Black and disenfranc­hised population­s.

Some didn’t believe Georgia would flip, “but we just continued to do the work,” said Mary- Pat Hector, an activist and graduate student at Georgia State University. “We refused to leave any votes on the table.”

Focusing on voter suppressio­n and voter turnout, Abrams has registered about 200,000 new voters in Georgia since she lost the 2018 gubernator­ial race by 1.4 percentage points.

“We are doing a much better job than we have done in the past, but we still have a long way to go,” said the DeKalb County Democratic Party’s Jackson. “It surprises me that we are not bluer. We are a state that is nearly half nonwhite with the secondlarg­est Black population in the country. Georgia should be more like Virginia and less like Florida, and we are not close yet. But that is the goal.”

Trump got about 18% of Black men across the country to vote for him and 8% of Black women. Both figures were higher than his support in 2016.

Nationally, he garnered 72% of the white male vote and 67% of white women.

Derrick Johnson, president of the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People, said the rising number of Black voters for Trump didn’t surprise him.

Even so, he said: “That still says that about 90% of Black voters will not tolerate white supremacis­t behavior. There is no community that is expected to have 100% of anything, as if we are a monolith. African Americans have never been a monolith, but we can speak volumes about what is important and the values that we hold.”

John Jackson said that, while Black women have always been extremely active in the political process, there have been too many missed opportunit­ies to engage Black men.

“Men are always the more conservati­ve bloc, so it should never be surprising that more Black men figure out, ‘ Hey, I am a conservati­ve,’” he said. “But even with that, Black men are the second-most-Democratic demographi­c in the country. We deserve to be courted and engaged.”

During the presidenti­al campaign, Trump was very active in trying to woo those Black male voters. Last November, he launched his Black Voices for Trump campaign by opening the first office in Atlanta. In the closing months of the campaign, he came to Georgia to unveil his Platinum Plan, which was supposed to invest $500 billion in capital into Black communitie­s.

Leo Smith, a Republican strategist who says he now identifies as an independen­t, said that, while Trump was losing the white suburban female vote, he was “adding Black male voices and that makes a difference.”

“Trump gave them something they could relate to because he talked to them and told them that they were important,” Smith said. “For the first time, Black men were told, ‘You were important.’ And it had an impact.”

Before the election, Butler said the Peoples’ Agenda made more than 1 million phone calls or sent text messages to potential Georgia voters.

The group also held several candidate forums across the state, sent out mailers to educate voters on the candidates, provided rides to the polls and trained more than 1,300 poll workers.

In some places in Georgia, Black residents waited up to eight hours to cast their ballots.

“Black voters showed up, stood in line and were committed to making sure their voices were heard,” Butler said. “They were willing to exercise those rights.”

In addition to other issues, the lingering COVID-19 crisis has had an impact on Black and minority voters, she said.

“COVID has really highlighte­d how all of this is connected to their everyday lives and what it means not to have benefits or be able to work,” Butler said. “Not getting relief programs, not having a plan for mitigating COVID so they can get back to their normal lives, it brought home what public policy and what elected officials do to their everyday lives.”

Hector, the 22- yearold graduate student, was hopeful that the end of the election would allow her to concentrat­e on school.

She said she hasn’t done her homework in months.

“But we have a runoff coming,” she said. “Now we need to figure out how to keep this momentum going through Jan. 5.”

 ?? MERIDITH KOHUT/ THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Laura Rodríguez and Ariana Lyons embrace as they watch President-elect Joe Biden give his victory speech on a television in Atlanta on Saturday. Biden thanked Black voters in his victory speech, saying “you’ve always had my back, and I’ll have yours.”
MERIDITH KOHUT/ THE NEW YORK TIMES Laura Rodríguez and Ariana Lyons embrace as they watch President-elect Joe Biden give his victory speech on a television in Atlanta on Saturday. Biden thanked Black voters in his victory speech, saying “you’ve always had my back, and I’ll have yours.”

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