With new voter suppression laws, the leaked Roe V. Wade opinion, and the assault on many other rights, some question whether the voting bloc that allowed Democrats to take the White House and control both houses of Congress will abandon the polls during the midterm election.
 By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent @StacyBrownMedia
The failure of Congress to pass legislation like the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act and the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act have frustrated African Americans.
With new voter suppression laws, the leaked Roe V. Wade opinion, and the assault on many other rights, some question whether the voting block that allowed Democrats to take the White House and control both houses of Congress will abandon the polls during the midterm election.
âBlack voters are understandably frustrated with the lack of reform around voter rights, but the lack of success with this is due to actions by Republicans, not Democrats,â insisted Michal Strahilevitz, the director of the Elfenworks Center for Responsible Business and marketing professor at Saint Maryâs College of California.
âBlack voters are far more pragmatic than most segments of the Democratic voter base. I expect them to show up not so much to reward Democrats for their lackluster success as to limit the power Republicans have to stop the necessary reforms,â Strahilevitz continued.
âIn short, Black voters are not just a loyal part of the Democratic base, and they are a very practical one too.â
Daniel Chan, chief technology officer at Marketplace Fairness, added that Black voters have several concerns that Democrats havenât addressed adequately.
âThese include police reform, voting rights, and economic inequality. If they do not turn out to vote in the midterms, the Democrats could lose control of Congress,â Chan offered.
âThe party has plans to address some of these concerns, but more needs to be done. Black voters are an essential part of the Democratic coalition, and it is important that the party does more to address their concerns,â he concluded.
The Black Lives Matter co-founder who now leads Black Futures Lab, Alicia Garza, observed the strict voter requirements that include restrictions for returning mail-in ballots.
Noting the unique challenges faced by Black voters, Black Futures Lab partnered with other groups to look closer at vote-by-mail in three states, Alabama, Nevada, and Texas.
âThe first solution and probably the only solution to turn the tide of the ongoing and multiple assaults on our rights is to build independent progressive Black political power,â Garza asserted.
âWe must equip Black voters with the tools necessary to be powerful. Unfortunately, Black voters are targeted by misinformation and disinformation every day,â she determined.
âIn 2020, Black voters were getting messages online telling them not to go to the polls, so we must make sure that our people can get to the polls and challenge the laws and policies that keep us from making important decisions. Black voters are kept from being powerful on purpse, by policies and the conservative movement has designed.â
Krystal Leaphart of Black Girls Vote said her organization begins engaging young girls as early as middle school with the mantra that âour vote is our voice.â
âWe target all age groups and communities of Black girls, and we seek to educate and empower Black girls. However, we must make sure that those on the margins are fully engaged,â Leaphart stated.
âMany young people are shocked at the amount of power that we collectively have,â Leaphart continued. âWhen we engage young Black girls, they are excited to vote, and the earlier we get to people and get them excited about the process and get them civically engaged, the better we will be.â
Leaphart noted that issues affecting adults also bother the young.
âThey are dealing with many the same issues that are not restricted to adults,â Leaphart asserted.
âThey are dealing with reproductive justice issues, Black girl pushout, and overcriminalization. But hearing that those issues can be dealt with at the polls and talking to elected officials have them excited.â
In a radio interview, Democratic Strategist Karen Finney implored all to understand what was at stake during the 2022 midterms.
âItâs very clear in terms of the GOP candidates who emerged â one of the big things we saw is that people who were peddlers of The Big Lie, deniers of the 2020 election, seem to do pretty well, regardless of Donald Trump,â Finney told radio personality Charles Ellison on his Reality Check show.
âThat tells you a lot about what their agenda would be if they win. Voters came out in record numbers in 2020, and we did something extraordinary,â Finney recounted.
âWeâre going to have to do it again in 2022 if we want to keep America moving away from what I saw as a very divisive destruction of the Trump years.â

