Black women seek rewards from Democrats after Alabama race
WASHINGTON — Once again, black women showed up for Democrats, with nearly all of them voting in Alabama for new Sen. Doug Jones, just as they did for Democratic candidates up and down the ballot in other states over the last few months.
The same women, having proven their loyalty by voting 98 per cent for Jones, now wonder whether the Democratic Party will return the favour by sharing some of the party’s political power, handing over places at the negotiating table and pushing legislation that speaks to their unique issues.
“Black women showed up and showed out,” said Kimberlè Crenshaw, co-founder of the African American Policy Forum. In “any other context, people who get it 98 per cent right, they’d be at the head of the class. It’s time for black women to be at the head of the political class.”
Black turnout was also high, at around 30 per cent, according to exit polls. That level of support mirrors what black women did in Virginia, where 91 per cent of them voted for incoming Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, and in New Jersey, where 94 per cent voted for incoming Gov. Phil Murphy.