Featured News

Black Votes Matter: Ferguson Adds Two African-Americans To City Council

Ferguson, Missouri, added two African-American representatives to the city council on Tuesday night. 30 percent of the city’s voters cast ballots in the April 7th city election. While that percentage may not sound impressive, it is more than double the normal turnout for a municipal election in the city. Voters elected two new African-Americans members to serve on the city’s council. As a result, for the first time in its 120-year history, Ferguson will have three African-Americans on the city council.

Prior to Tuesday’s vote, Ferguson has just one black council member on its six-seat city council. That number will increase to a more representative three of six seats, once the newly elected council members are sworn in. Ferguson’s population is roughly 2/3rds African-American, but the city government has been dominated by white politicians and administrators.

The current African-American council member, Dwayne James (2nd Ward), will be joined by Ella Jones (1st Ward) and Wesley Bell (3rd Ward), the two newly elected African-American members to the council. Jones chairs the city’s Human Rights Commission. She won decisively in a four-way race, that featured two white and two black candidates. She has long been a critic of the way the Ferguson police treat young black men in the community, so her victory will be welcomed by supporters of justice in Ferguson.

To get more stories like this, subscribe to our newsletter The Daily.

Although the higher than average turnout, and the election of two African-American candidates is encouraging, the results were not a total victory for black empowerment in Ferguson. In the 3rd Ward race, Bell, who is a municipal court judge in Velda City, defeated Lee Smith, an African-American retiree who was more closely identified with the protest community than Bell was. While Bell is also African-American, and an advocate for community policing, his position as a judge in the county aroused some suspicions with voters wanting to promote greater change in the city.

Unfortunately, in the 2nd Ward race between two white candidates, former mayor Brian Fletcher defeated independent journalist Bob Hudgins. Fletcher founded the “I Love Ferguson” campaign, while Hudgins was active in the Ferguson protest movement. Although Fletcher’s victory was disappointing for activists, the larger story was the higher turnout transforming the city council from 17 percent African-American to 50 percent African-American overnight.

Electing a more representative city council will not necessarily solve all of Ferguson’s problems. However, it is an important first step in making the city’s government more responsive to its residents. Elections matter, and in the city of Ferguson on Tuesday night, especially in the 1st Ward, black votes mattered.

 

Image via BET

Recent Posts

Donald Trump Has A Massive Pennsylvania Problem

The Pennsylvania presidential primary didn't have any contested contests, but Trump managed to lose nearly…

3 hours ago

As Trump Freezes In Court, Biden Rips Him In Florida

President Biden blasted Trump for taking away reproductive freedom as the former president/criminal defendant complained…

12 hours ago

The Hush Money Trial Is Breaking Donald Trump

Trump broke down over the gag order and ranted about how cold the courtroom is,…

13 hours ago

Just 1 Protester Shows Up To Support Trump At Manhattan Court

Trump is angry that no one is showing up to support him at his criminal,…

14 hours ago

Judge Tells Trump’s Lawyer He’s Losing All Credibility with the Court

Donald Trump's lawyers couldn't defend their client's actions, so they resorted to claiming that it…

17 hours ago

Trump Is Throwing A Fit Because He Thinks Cops Are Scaring Away His MAGA Protesters

Before the gag order violation hearing, Trump went on a political rant because he was…

18 hours ago