What's Going On

What’s Going On

THE YEAR 2020
The year 2020 in the Common Era has significance like no other. It was the first time in a century that a virus pandemic, COVID19, devastated the planet and world economies. More than 331, 000 American lives have been claimed by COVID19, as of this writing. In America, it was the year of home lockdowns, social protests, job losses, food insecurities, KARENS, militias, white supremacists, domestic terrorism and the list goes on.
It was a year of American reflection on Black Lives Matters, social inequalities and other democratic institutions. The year 2020 marks the end of the most chaotic malevolent presidency in US history. Prayerfully, 2020 will not be repeated in the readers’ lifetime save for the introspection it provoked about our common and shared humanity. HAPPY 2021!

DECEMBER 2020
Most Americans are pleased with Joe Biden 11/3 presidential election victory. Still trying to understand President-elect Joe Biden’s choices, especially about the dearth of African Americans named for top cabinet jobs. He is to be commended for his choice of Retired African American Army General Lloyd Austin to helm the Department of Defense. Ohio Congresswoman Marcia Fudge, as HUD Secretary, was looking forward to Agriculture where her creds reside. Pete Buttigieg, yes, a polyglot Rhodes Scholar and former Indiana mayor, but what are his Transportation creds? It’s a fait accompli if the nominees pass muster with the US Senate. Most of Biden’s cabinet choices are moderate/centrists, aged 50-plus. What did the young progressives get from their considerable Biden electoral support? Connecticut Schools chief Dr. Miguel Cardona is Biden’s choice for Secretary of Education. The Congressional Hispanic Caucus demanded five top Cabinet posts. Alejandro Mayorkas is Biden’s pick to head Homeland Security; and California Attorney General Xavier Becerra is his Health and Human Services Cabinet choice. Asian Americans are pissed that no one from their group has been named to a cabinet post. Biden’s choice of Native American Congresswoman Deb Haaland of New Mexico as Secretary of the Interior is an inspired one! Keep hearing that Tom Perez, DNC Chair, is on Biden’s shortlist for Attorney General! Huh?!

BY STATE
Georgia: By 12/29, more than 2.3 million of state’s 7.7 million eligible voters will have cast ballots for the two most coveted US Senate seats; contestants include Democrats Jon Ossoff and African American Rev. Raphael Warnock vs. incumbent GOP Senators renown for corruption to determine which party dominates the US Senate and the President-elect Biden’s legislative agenda. What happens to political phenom Stacey Abrams, who registered almost 1 million Georgians, many of whom crossed over from red to blue status and voted on 11/3 for Biden? She deserves a cabinet post.

California: Thought that Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom would name an African American woman like Congressmembers Karen Bass or Barbara Lee to succeed US Senator Kamala Harris, who is Vice President-elect. Newsom named Latino Secretary of State Alex Padilla to succeed Harris. Guess that he is numbers crunching. California’s population is 40% Latino and 39% white.

Nina Turner

Ohio: Who will Governor Mike DeWine name to succeed Representative Fudge, HUD nominee, when she is confirmed by the Senate? Will it be African American Democratic firebrand former state senator Nina Turner, a Bernie Sanders for President co-chair and spokesperson in 2016 and 2020.

NEW YORK POLITICS
Albany: NYS, in special session, passed the nation’s most comprehensive anti-eviction law, which bars landlords from evicting tenants for at least 60 days. Law is in response to the COVID19 crisis and job losses. The law was enacted on 12/28, coincidental with news about approval of the $900 billion federal relief package from which NYS will get $1.3 billion in rent relief. New York neighbors New Jersey and Connecticut have passed similar laws.

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Maya Wiley


NYC: It’s a well-known fact or myth that the NYC Mayor position is the second most difficult job in America. There is a dizzying array of candidates signed up for the privilege. They include Eric Adams, current Brooklyn Borough President; billionaire John Catsimatidis; Art Chang; Kevin Coenen; Shaun Donovan, former HUD Secretary/Obama; Cleopatra Fitzgerald; Aaron Foldenauer; Kathy Garcia, former DeBlasio Commissioner; Zach Iscol; Max Kaplan; Abbey Laurel Smith; Carlos Menchaca; Ray McGuire, former Citi Bank Vice Chair; Dianne Morales, community leader; William Pepitone; Paperboy Prince; Christine Quinn, former City Council Speaker; Julia Qing Reaves; Max Rose, former Congressman; Curtis Sliwa, Guardian Angels; Scott Stringer, NYC Comptroller; Loree Sutton; Jocelyn Taylor; Attorney Maya Wiley; and Andrew Yang. Adams, McGuire, Wiley and Morales are African American hopefuls in the mix. The mayoral hopefuls would be what the late Mayor David Dinkins would call New York’s gorgeous mosaic.

Kevin Parker


Electorate needs info from the mayoral candidates about their positions on NYPD reform; affordable housing; public education; health care reform; and city’s epidemics of food insecurities, homelessness and crime, including extensive gun violence Brooklyn, Bronx and Queens. Mayor would have to address the joblessness that attends the city’s lowest wage earners. Look forward to NY1 political anchor Errol Louis’ calendar for mayoral hopeful debates.
Two African American Democratic NYS Senators – Brian Benjamin from Harlem and Kevin Parker from Brooklyn – are vying for the NYC Comptroller’s office.
NY City Council: This legislative body consists of 51 seats, 34 of which will be vacated because of term limits next year. Councilman Bill Perkins, who is not term limited and represents Central Harlem’s District #9, had countless opponents, including district leader William Allen; Dr. Keith Taylor, community activist, CB10 member; Attorney Keith Wright, NY County Democratic leader; Joshua Clennon, Millennial entrepreneur; Billy Council, a Harlem entrepreneur, and district leader Cordell Cleare. Will Athena Moore, Manhattan Boro Prexy Gale Brewer’s uptown lieutenant, and NYS Assembly member Inez Dickens, former NYC Council member, join the crowded field of candidates?

Mathieu Eugene

Brooklyn: The following are some of the Borough President hopefuls, City Councilmen Robert Cornegy and Mathieu Eugene; Lamor Whitehead-Miller; Kimberly Council; Khari Edwards; Robert Elstein, Raphael Espinat Jr; Pearline Field; Anthony Jones; Shanduke McPhatter, Robert Ramos, Jr. and JoAnne Simon.

If African Americans learned anything this year, it is that Black Voters Really Matter!

A Harlem-based brand/media consultant, Victoria can be reached at victoria.horsford@gmail.com.

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