Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hip-Hop Political Education Summit has local ties

Streaming event linked to Hip-Hop Week MKD

- Piet Levy and Alison Dirr Contact Piet at (414) 223-5162 or plevy@journalsen­tinel.com. Follow him on Twitter at @pietlevy or Facebook at facebook.com/PietLevyMJ­S.

It’s a hip-hop event with a lineup like no other.

Music stars Public Enemy’s Chuck D, YG, Big Daddy Kane, Bun B, Rapsody and Cordae are on the bill — along with journalist­s like Soledad O’Brien, academics like Cornel West and politician­s like Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J. — for the Hip-Hop Political Education Summit, streaming on Tuesday, National Voter Registrati­on Day.

With its mix of music and social-issue presentati­ons, the summit shares some characteri­stics of Hip-Hop Week MKE, establishe­d in 2018 by Milwaukee Ald. Khalif Rainey. That annual week of events — the only one of its kind sponsored by a city’s government — features concerts and explores financial literacy, politics, health and wellness and other topics through a hip-hop lens.

“It’s probably best to go to the doctor and hear from him as to how you can make lifestyle changes and live healthier, but some of those messages just don’t resonate from those individual­s,” Rainey said. “But when you put them in the context of hip-hop, now some of the apolitical and the disenfranc­hised and the unengaged members of our community, their interest is piqued.”

The power of hip-hop, he said, is its ability to bring together diverse groups.

David Mays, founder of seminal hiphop magazine the Source and a chief architect for Hip-Hop Week MKE last year, is one of the co-founders of the summit. Hip-Hop Week MKE is a sponsor and Rainey will be a speaker. (He’s not the only politician from Wisconsin presenting; state Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes is also part of the lineup.)

“In a lot of ways, you could say that before there was Black Lives Matter there was hip-hop,” Mays said. “In the late ‘80s and ‘90s, it was the vehicle that gave voice to all the same issues, of systemic racism, police brutality, etc., that today are making it into the mainstream discourse.”

The summit will be free to watch on hip-hop media site Revolt TV’s YouTube and Facebook pages, with times to be finalized. Viewers are asked to register for free, so they’ll be able to ask questions of the speakers, at hiphoppoli­ticaled .com.

Roots in summer of protest

Mays establishe­d the Hip-Hop Political Education Summit this summer with Bakari Kitwana, a cultural critic and activist (and former Source editorin-chief), after the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s police custody sparked Black Lives Matter protests around the country.

“With all the social and political activity, all the protests that are going on, it just felt to me that there was a void in terms of hip-hop not really having a voice,” Mays said.

At the same time, Mays was working with Rainey on programmin­g for HipHop Week MKE, which had been scheduled to take place Aug. 17-22, the same week that the Democratic National Convention was to be held in Milwaukee. The coronaviru­s pandemic forced the DNC to become a largely virtual event and Hip-Hop Week MKE to be canceled.

But the momentum Mays and Rainey were building for Hip-Hop Week was channeled into the summit, Mays said.

“I had been feeling we can’t let another year go by and not try to do anything,” Mays said of working with Rainey. “His vision from the beginning with Hip-Hop Week was to demonstrat­e and show how hip-hop can be used to engage atrisk communitie­s on subject matters that can be life-changing, but that sometimes folks don’t pay attention to.”

Voter suppressio­n a central theme

That’s the approach for Tuesday’s summit, with voter suppressio­n being an overarchin­g theme, one that’s important in Wisconsin, a battlegrou­nd in the November election.

Wisconsin has already been at the center of this debate this year.

The state moved forward with an inperson election in April in the middle of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Voters waiting to cast their ballots in key races, including for state Supreme Court and the Democratic presidenti­al primary, experience­d long lines after a severe shortage of poll workers forced Milwaukee to open five polling centers instead of its normal 180 sites.

This all came on the heels a contentiou­s legal battle over an effort to quickly remove thousands from the state’s voter rolls because they were believed to have moved. The state Supreme Court is not expected to rule on the case until after November’s election.

“There’s many in our community … when they hear about the Supreme Court of Wisconsin forcing us to have an election and cast our ballot in the midst of a pandemic instead of deferring it to a later date, they scroll past that article,” Rainey said. “But when you put it in the context of hip-hop and you have these conversati­ons with people who you can identify with, people that you can relate to, I think we stand a chance to engage people and have them actively get involved with politics going forward.”

Rainey is hopeful Milwaukee residents will tune in and anticipate­s the artists and academics will draw a diverse audience.

Ultimately, he said, making change comes down to voting and electing people who are focused on the issues residents care about.

“The whole goal of it all is to inspire and encourage and empower people to get active in their communitie­s and pay closer attention to what’s going on, so they can be involved and their voice can be heard,” he said.

Keynote speeches, panels, performanc­es

Tuesday’s summit will include four keynotes and musical performanc­es by Akua Naru and Rebel Diaz.

The opening discussion explores how hip-hop has shaped political discourse, with veteran music producer 9th Wonder and Duke University professor Mark Anthony Neal moderating a panel that includes West, Kane and Rapsody.

A second panel, moderated by “The Breakfast Club” co-host DJ Envy and hip-hop talk show “State of the Culture” co-host Eboni K. Williams featuring Chuck D and National Urban League President Marc Morial, will look at how the pandemic has exacerbate­d voter suppressio­n.

The third keynote will look at social media disinforma­tion related to the election, moderated by Newark Mayor Ras Baraka and including Bun B and U.S. Rep. Andre Carson, D-Indiana, among its panelists.

Latosha Brown, co-founder of the advocacy group Black Voters Matter, will present the final keynote.

Following this summit, Mays is pursuing funding for more events this fall ahead of the election, including some that may be tailored specifically to voting in Wisconsin.

“One of the things about hip-hop, that has always been part of its power, is that it’s a very kind of unifying culture, and it appeals to a lot of different types of people and brings different types of people together in a very powerful way,” Mays said. “Hopefully, we will see some incredible interestin­g things come out of this, and I hope that this lights a flame under the hip-hop community a little bit, so we can do more and make a difference.”

 ?? MARTY PEARL/SPECIAL TO THE USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Chuck D — a hip-hop legend and leading force behind the politicall­y outspoken Public Enemy — is among the artists, activists, academics, politician­s and journalist­s participat­ing in the inaugural Hip-Hop Political Education Summit Tuesday. It’s free to stream and open to the public.
MARTY PEARL/SPECIAL TO THE USA TODAY NETWORK Chuck D — a hip-hop legend and leading force behind the politicall­y outspoken Public Enemy — is among the artists, activists, academics, politician­s and journalist­s participat­ing in the inaugural Hip-Hop Political Education Summit Tuesday. It’s free to stream and open to the public.

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