GA Voice

Activist Devin Barrington-Ward Announces Run for Atlanta City Council

- Olivia Martin

Devin Barrington-Ward has dedicated much of his life to advocacy and political work, from starting a political organizati­on in high school to later relocating his advocacy work to D.C. He’s now returning to his hometown of Atlanta to run for office. This is a career path that makes sense for someone like Barrington-Ward, whose passion for civil service spans childhood and beyond.

“I probably always wanted to be an elected official,” he told Georgia Voice. “I would use my Legos and my Hot Wheels to create little cities, and there would be conflict, but we would solve it.”

The community organizer, frontline activist, and managing director of the Black Futurists Group announced his run to represent District 9 on the Atlanta City Council on May 26. For Barrington-Ward, this marks a return to the political arena after a previous loss. In 2020, he ran to represent District 38 in the Georgia State Senate, but lost in the Democratic primary to incumbent Horacena Tate.

Barrington-Ward’s political resume extends all the way back to high school. When he was not elected Class President, he took matters into his own hands and created his own political club. From there, he held a handful of roles on campaigns as well as political internship­s and then served as one of the youngest Chiefs of Staff in the history of the Georgia State Senate.

Many of the issues Barrington-Ward advocates for are particular­ly relevant to his own lived experience. He draws upon his own experience­s being Black and queer to inform his activism and pushes for policy.

“As a queer person, my identity was not fully understood by my family, and so there was some family separation and distance because my family’s from the Caribbean and there’s some extra stigma that can sometimes be attached to a child coming out in the Caribbean household,” he said. “So, I got to see also the realities that Black LGBTQ people go through in this city at a very early age. I’ve had friends die of HIV … and I’ve been homeless myself, I’ve had friends who are homeless.”

Based on this personal experience and his wide breadth of political knowledge, Barrington-Ward hopes to turn the tide on policies that prove harmful, particular­ly to marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

“I’ve had, you know, dual experience­s,” he said. “I’ve seen politics and how it can work, and how bad policies and stigma and homophobia and transphobi­a can impact our lived experience­s, and so I bring that to the full weight of my activism.”

With an overarchin­g theme of “Wake Up Atlanta!,” Barrington-Ward’s campaign centers on the “three Ps”: public safety, public infrastruc­ture, and poverty.

“It’s time to wake up and recognize that there are some issues that we have continued to collude with because we have adopted some old mindsets to old problems,” he said. “And we need some new ideas and fresh blood to come in and to transform these problems.”

He has many programs, changes, and developmen­ts in mind for the city, including the closure of Atlanta City Detention Center. His campaign also supports alternativ­es to policing in the form of mental health services and diversion initiative­s, providing young people in particular with jobs that pay $18 an hour, including city support in the form of workforce developmen­t bonds, and funding for infrastruc­ture, street repairs, and affordable housing.

The link between Barrington-Ward’s activism and his politics is strong, and he plans to draw from his knowledge and experience on the frontlines of protest and advocacy to enact policies that protests and people in the city of Atlanta have been demanding for months or even years or decades.

“The streets have been talking,” he said. “They were talking before the death of George Floyd. They’ve been talking when HIV rates continue to soar in this community, and no one was doing anything about it. The streets have been talking when trans folks have experience­d harassment by APD … The streets have been talking, but many of the elected officials who currently hold office have not been listening.”

Barrington-Ward also seeks LGBTQ representa­tion in Atlanta’s leadership, realizing the importance of the city on the national and world stage and the importance of having LGBTQ people in positions of power to advocate for their communitie­s.

“I just think it’s imperative that marginaliz­ed communitie­s not ask for power but demand it, and so as a Black queer person … this is indicative of not asking for power on behalf of my community but taking it for the people who need it,” he said. “It’s imperative that we not just have one LGBTQ Council member, but I believe in a city that is probably one of the most important cities for LGBTQ people, for Black people, and just one of the most important cities in the world, it’s imperative that we have numerous LGBTQ leaders.”

More informatio­n about Barrington­Ward’s campaign can be found at wakeupatla­nta.org.

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