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November 12, 2016 - November 12, 2016, The Afro-American A1<br />
Volume 125 123 No. 16 20–22<br />
www.afro.com $2.00 $1.00<br />
NOVEMBER 19, 2016 - NOVEMBER 25, 2016<br />
Inside<br />
Baltimore<br />
Forest Whitaker<br />
Touches Down<br />
in Alien Tale<br />
‘Arrival’<br />
C1<br />
Commentary<br />
Kaepernick<br />
Sparks a Not-<br />
So-Silent<br />
Revolution from<br />
the Field<br />
By George Lambert<br />
A4<br />
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New Fans<br />
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Your History • Your Community • Your News<br />
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Join Host Sean Yoes<br />
Monday-Friday 5-7 p.m.<br />
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7 47105 21847 2<br />
0 9<br />
AP Photo/Susan Walsh<br />
Hundreds of demonstrators gathered in Washington, D.C. to protest Donald Trump’s election. They are mostly young<br />
people who appear to have walked out of school to protest. See story on D1.<br />
Trump in His Own Words:<br />
‘Laziness is a Trait in Blacks’<br />
By Zenitha Prince<br />
Senior AFRO Correspondent<br />
zprince@afro.com<br />
To hear Donald Trump tell it, he’s the “least racist person<br />
on Earth” and doesn’t have a racist bone in his body—but then<br />
that’s what a lot of bigots say. In fact, like those of his ilk, he<br />
further claimed to LOVE “the Blacks,” “the Hispanics,” “the<br />
Muslims” and whichever group he happens to be denigrating<br />
at the time. However, the president-elect’s scorn of non-White,<br />
non-Christian groups has been made glaringly obvious over the<br />
decades, not only in his actions, but also his very own words.<br />
As far back as 1989, in an interview with Bryan Gumbel<br />
“…I would love to be a welleducated<br />
Black, because I really<br />
do believe they have the actual<br />
advantage today.”<br />
–Donald Trump in 1989<br />
during an NBC program on race, Trump displayed at the least,<br />
a cluelessness on matters of race and, at worst, willful disregard<br />
for the facts surrounding racial dynamics in America. He said,<br />
ignoring all evidence to the contrary – including the White,<br />
dynastic privilege that allowed him to launch his own empire:<br />
Continued on A3<br />
AFRO Archived Presidential Coverage<br />
Unexpected election results are not new. Such occurred in<br />
1948 when the sitting President Harry Truman unexpectedly<br />
defeated Gov. Thomas E. Dewey who--early on-most people<br />
thought would win handily.<br />
People Tell AFRO Writer<br />
Dewey’s Certain to Win<br />
By Douglass Hall<br />
Oct. 9, 1948<br />
ABOARD DEWEY VICTORY<br />
SPECIAL - Governor Thomas E Dewey<br />
returned to Albany Sunday afternoon after<br />
14 days of transcontinental campaigning<br />
during which time he traveled 8,862 miles<br />
and delivered 60 speeches to approximately<br />
half a million persons.<br />
He plans to stay in the capital just long<br />
enough “to catch up with official duties<br />
and get a little rest,” and on Sunday will<br />
Continued on A5<br />
Photo by Andy Kropa/Invision/AP, File<br />
Gwen Ifill, a journalist who mentored<br />
many journalists, died on Nov. 14.<br />
By James Wright<br />
Special to the AFRO<br />
jwright@afro.com<br />
While the election of<br />
Donald J. Trump has cast<br />
a cloud over the Nov.<br />
8 elections, Blacks can<br />
By Jacqueline Jones<br />
Special to the AFRO<br />
• Strong Support<br />
for Superintendant<br />
Dance Following<br />
Social Media Post<br />
B1<br />
Washington<br />
• D.C. High School<br />
Students Protest<br />
Trump<br />
D1<br />
Appreciation<br />
Gwen Ifill, Journalism<br />
Pioneer, Was Mentor to Many<br />
Television news anchor and public affairs<br />
show host and media pioneer Gwen Ifill died Nov.<br />
14 of endometrial cancer at a hospice center in<br />
Washington, D.C. She was 61.<br />
While best known as co-anchor of “The PBS<br />
NewsHour” and moderator of the public affairs show<br />
“Washington Week,” Ifill also had a distinguished<br />
career in newspapers, working for the Boston<br />
Herald, the Baltimore Evening Sun, The Washington<br />
Post and The New York Times before moving on to<br />
NBC News and, finally, PBS.<br />
She also wrote “The Breakthrough: Politics<br />
Continued on A3<br />
115th U.S. Congress Contains 50 Black Reps., a Record<br />
celebrate the 50 Black<br />
members of the U.S.<br />
Congress, the highest number<br />
in history. When the 115th<br />
Lisa Blunt Rochester is<br />
the first Black and female<br />
to represent Delaware in<br />
Congress.<br />
Courtesy photo<br />
1st Black Marine Corps<br />
Aviator Lt. Gen. Petersen<br />
Honored with Destroyer<br />
By James Bentley<br />
AFRO Associate Editor<br />
jbentley@afro.com<br />
The ship bearing Frank E. Petersen Jr.’s<br />
name, the USS Frank E. Petersen Jr., is set<br />
to join the naval fleet in 2020. Petersen, a<br />
decorated military officer and fighter pilot<br />
session of the U.S. Congress<br />
convenes on Jan. 3, 2017,<br />
there will be 47 Blacks in the<br />
U.S. House of Representatives<br />
and three in the U.S. Senate.<br />
U.S. Rep. G. K. Butterfield<br />
(D-N.C.), chairman of the<br />
Congressional Black Caucus,<br />
is looking forward to the<br />
increased numbers of Black<br />
legislators. “We look forward<br />
to continuing our work as the<br />
‘Conscience of the Congress’<br />
to empower America’s most<br />
neglected citizens and<br />
address their legislative<br />
concerns,” Butterfield said.<br />
Continued on A5<br />
Lt. Gen. Frank<br />
E. Petersen<br />
died in 2015 at his home in Stevensville, Md. at the age of 83.<br />
On Nov. 9, at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point,<br />
Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus announced that the Arleigh<br />
Continued on A3<br />
Copyright © 2016 by the Afro-American Company
A2 The Afro-American, November 12, 2016 - November 12, 2016<br />
November 19, 2016 - November 25, 2016, The Afro-American A3<br />
Trump<br />
Continued from A1<br />
“A well-educated Black has a tremendous advantage over<br />
a well-educated White in terms of the job market…if I was<br />
starting off today, I would love to be a well-educated Black,<br />
because I really do believe they have the actual advantage<br />
today.”<br />
That same year, Trump was a chief instigator in fanning the<br />
lynch mob mentality that led to the wrongful imprisonment<br />
of five Black and Hispanic teens in the notorious “Central<br />
Park Five” case, in which a White woman was attacked while<br />
jogging in the park. Even when DNA evidence exonerated<br />
the teens, the real estate mogul remained unrepentant, saying,<br />
“These young men do not exactly have the past of angels.”<br />
Then, in 1991, former Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino<br />
President John R. O’Donnell, in his book Trumped, claimed<br />
that Trump once pulled out the old tropes about Jews and greed<br />
and Blacks and laziness during a discussion about a finance<br />
employee with whom O’Donnell was displeased:<br />
“Yeah, I never liked the guy,” Trump allegedly said. “I<br />
don’t think he knows what the f––– he’s doing. My accountants<br />
up in New York are always complaining about him. He’s not<br />
responsive. And isn’t it funny, I’ve got Black accountants at<br />
the Trump Castle and at Trump Plaza. Black guys counting my<br />
money! I hate it. The only kind of people I want counting my<br />
money are short guys that wear yarmulkes every day. Those are<br />
the kind of people I want counting my money. No one else.”<br />
Trump allegedly added, “Besides that, I’ve got to tell you<br />
something else. I think that the guy is lazy. And it’s probably<br />
not his fault because laziness is a trait in Blacks. It really is, I<br />
believe that. It’s not something they can control. … Don’t you<br />
agree?”<br />
In a 1997 interview with Playboy, Trump acknowledged<br />
O’Donnell’s book was “probably true.” But, he backpedaled a<br />
couple years later when seeking the reform party’s nomination<br />
for president.<br />
With the popularization of social media, specifically Twitter,<br />
Trump’s unvarnished prejudice was given room to breathe, as<br />
he trafficked in fear of non-Whites. And, the election of the<br />
nation’s first African-American president seemed to provide<br />
rich fodder, giving rise to the racist “birther movement” – a tide<br />
that would eventually sweep Trump into the White House –<br />
which sought to delegitimize Barack Obama’s presidency.<br />
Beginning in 2011, the self-proclaimed Tea Partier began<br />
publicly questioning Obama’s citizenship—perhaps prompted<br />
by his own aspirations toward the White House, which he<br />
publicly mulled over at the time.<br />
“I have people that have been studying [Obama’s birth<br />
certificate] and they cannot believe what they’re finding ... I<br />
would like to have him show his birth certificate, and can I be<br />
honest with you, I hope he can. Because if he can’t, if he can’t,<br />
if he wasn’t born in this country, which is a real possibility<br />
... then he has pulled one of the great cons in the history of<br />
politics,” he saidon NBC’s “Today” show.<br />
Trump only publicly declared he was wrong in a brusque<br />
“According to Bill O’Reilly, 80%<br />
of all the shootings in New<br />
York City are Blacks-if you add<br />
Hispanics, that figure goes to<br />
98%. 1% White.”<br />
– Donald Trump tweet<br />
statement this September, after years of denying evidence of<br />
the president’s birth.<br />
In June 2013, he let loose with stereotypes equating people<br />
of color with violent crime.<br />
“According to Bill O’Reilly, 80% of all the shootings in<br />
New York City are Blacks-if you add Hispanics, that figure<br />
goes to 98%. 1% White,” Trump tweeted. He later added,<br />
“Sadly, the overwhelming amount of violent crime in our major<br />
cities is committed by Blacks and Hispanics - a tough subject -<br />
must be discussed.”<br />
That November, he followed up by retweeting a post which<br />
over-inflated statistics related to crime, making it appear that<br />
Blacks were responsible for most of the murders in the U.S.<br />
Trump’s racist vitriol did not abate with his candidacy<br />
for the nation’s highest office—in fact, it got worse. And, he<br />
launched his campaign by smearing Mexican immigrants,<br />
calling them “rapists” and “killers.”<br />
In addition, Trump continues to use the definite article “the”<br />
when referring to ethnic and racial groups—“the Blacks,”<br />
“the Hispanics,” “the Muslims”.... “The” in such cases often<br />
acts as a separatist term that erases individuality and paints all<br />
members of a racial or ethnic group as one monolithic entity,<br />
essentially, “The Other.”<br />
Similarly, Trump often used broad strokes to describe<br />
communities of color, often in negative terms. During a Sept.<br />
20, 2016, stump speech in North Carolina, for example, Trump<br />
described what he saw as the dire state of all Black communities.<br />
“We’re going to rebuild our inner cities because our African-<br />
American communities are absolutely in the worst shape that<br />
they’ve ever been in before. Ever. Ever. Ever,” Trump said ,<br />
totally overlooking the historical atrocities of slavery, Jim Crow<br />
and the like. He piled on the ignorance, saying, “You take a<br />
look at the inner cities, you get no education, you get no jobs,<br />
you get shot walking down the street. They’re worse -- I mean,<br />
honestly, places like Afghanistan are safer than some of our<br />
inner cities.”<br />
In a November 2015 interview with Yahoo.com, the<br />
president-elect said he would deport any Syrian refugees<br />
allowed to enter the country under President Obama. The<br />
reality TV star also called for increased surveillance of Muslims<br />
and mosques in the United States, and did not rule out tactics<br />
such as warrantless searches, creating a database of Muslims<br />
and giving them special IDs that identify their religion.<br />
“We’re going to have to look at the mosques. We’re going to<br />
have to look very, very carefully,” he said, adding, “We’re going<br />
to have to do certain things that were frankly unthinkable a year<br />
ago…. And some people are going to be upset about it, but I think<br />
that now everybody is feeling that security is going to rule.”<br />
To be fair, Trump has been an equal opportunity offender,<br />
also wielding anti-Semitic tropes and furthering anti-Semitic<br />
conspiracy theories. During an address to the Republican<br />
Jewish Coalition last December, for example, Trump drew<br />
on the common stereotype that paints Jews as money-loving<br />
“Shylocks.”<br />
“You’re not going to support me because I don’t want your<br />
money,” he told the Jewish audience. He also said, “Is there<br />
anybody that doesn’t renegotiate deals in this room? Perhaps<br />
more than any other room I’ve ever spoken in.”<br />
Just as damaging as the deluge of hateful language Trump<br />
has spewed is what he has not said, such as his unwillingness<br />
to quickly and firmly repudiate supporters at his rallies who<br />
physically attacked people of color or White supremacists who<br />
co-opted his campaign.<br />
Gwen Ifill<br />
Continued from A1<br />
and Race in the Age of<br />
Obama,” a book published<br />
the day President Obama was<br />
inaugurated in 2009.<br />
Ifill was not the first<br />
African-American television<br />
anchor – Max Robinson on<br />
ABC and Bernard Shaw on<br />
CNN beat her to that job – she<br />
was the first Black woman to<br />
anchor a weekly news show<br />
when she was appointed in<br />
1999 to moderate PBS’ thennamed<br />
“Washington Week<br />
in Review.” She also was<br />
the first African American<br />
woman to moderate a vice<br />
presidential debate and<br />
to co-anchor a network<br />
newscast, when she joined<br />
Judy Woodruff on the PBS<br />
“NewsHour” in 2013. She<br />
also left a rich legacy of<br />
mentoring young journalists,<br />
bringing diverse groups<br />
together and consistently<br />
exuding calm professionalism.<br />
“This is a devastating loss<br />
for our family and for me<br />
personally,” Sherrilyn Ifill,<br />
president and director-counsel<br />
of the NAACP Legal Defense<br />
and Educational Fund and<br />
Gwen Ifill’s cousin, said in a<br />
statement.<br />
“Gwen was a shining<br />
light in our family and a true<br />
and dear friend. She was<br />
well known to Baltimoreans<br />
from her years as a tough<br />
and tenacious reporter at The<br />
Evening Sun.<br />
“We have lost her voice at<br />
a time when we desperately<br />
need sober, tenacious, truthful<br />
journalism to help guide<br />
us through the challenging<br />
days ahead in this country.<br />
Identification Statements<br />
Fortunately Gwen believed<br />
in serving as a mentor. And<br />
so there are scores of young,<br />
African American women<br />
journalists who are her<br />
professional daughters.”<br />
One of those mentored<br />
by Ifill was Sonya Ross, race<br />
and ethnicity editor for The<br />
Associated Press. She recalled<br />
Ifill’s warmth and grace when<br />
they first met at the northwest<br />
gate of the White House around<br />
1993 while Ifill was a Times<br />
reporter and Ross was covering<br />
the urban affairs beat for the AP.<br />
“I had been to a news<br />
conference at the (National)<br />
Press Club and decided to<br />
walk back to our offices<br />
and I saw Gwen talking to<br />
a colleague. I went up and<br />
introduced myself, told her<br />
who I was and that I admired<br />
her work.<br />
“She said, ‘Thank you.<br />
Now who are you again?’<br />
and flipped the conversation<br />
over to be about me. She said,<br />
‘You can do this, too, you<br />
know. It’s easy.’”<br />
“One word that comes<br />
immediately to mind when<br />
I think of Gwen is ‘class,’”<br />
said Michael K. Frisby,<br />
a media strategist based<br />
in Washington, D.C., and<br />
a former White House<br />
correspondent for The<br />
Wall Street Journal, who<br />
competed against Ifill when<br />
they covered presidential<br />
campaigns.<br />
Frisby admitted he caught<br />
a lot of flack in his reporting<br />
days for having a little too<br />
much swagger and pushing<br />
boundaries, but he accepted<br />
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gentle chiding from Ifill<br />
who, he said, was one of the<br />
few people whose advice he<br />
actually took to heart.<br />
“I was always getting the<br />
Gwen Look or the ‘Frisby,<br />
what are you doing?’ talk,”<br />
Frisby said. “She played by<br />
the rules. I pushed the rules to<br />
the limit.”<br />
“I never saw her ruffled;<br />
she never responded with the<br />
anger you’d expect to hear<br />
in some situations. She was<br />
always classy in everything<br />
she did,” Frisby said. “She had<br />
this radiant smile and it always<br />
affected people.”<br />
After distinguishing<br />
herself as moderator of vice<br />
presidential debates in 2004<br />
and 2008, Ifill was not invited<br />
to moderate a presidential<br />
debate in 2012, when President<br />
Obama ran for re-election.<br />
While many of her colleagues<br />
were angered, Ifill never<br />
addressed the perceived snub,<br />
publicly or privately.<br />
“We were like, ‘How<br />
many times are you supposed<br />
to be the vice presidential<br />
moderator when you certainly<br />
are qualified to moderate a<br />
presidential debate?” said AP’s<br />
Ross.<br />
“Gwen just didn’t address<br />
it. She said, ‘we can talk about<br />
it over drinks,’ but it never<br />
happened. She never talked<br />
about it,” Ross said. “In the<br />
grand scheme of things, she<br />
decided not to make a big deal<br />
out of it.”<br />
Ross recalled another time,<br />
during the mid-90s, when she<br />
and Ifill were covering the<br />
Clinton White House and Ifill’s<br />
legendary poise – and pointed<br />
sense of humor – were on<br />
display.<br />
The two were among a<br />
group of journalists traveling<br />
with first lady Hillary Clinton<br />
on a tour of Africa.<br />
“We were out in some<br />
rural part of Tanzania and<br />
they called a press briefing<br />
at 10 o’clock at night. We<br />
didn’t feel like going, but<br />
there was nowhere to go.<br />
The hotel didn’t have a lot<br />
of amenities and it was so<br />
rural that you couldn’t go<br />
out and walk around outside<br />
the lodge because there were<br />
lions at night. Hillary Clinton<br />
came out, urging us to come<br />
to the briefing, and she said<br />
to Gwen, ‘C’mon, these are<br />
your people.’ We looked at<br />
Gwen and she just smiled and<br />
said, ‘Now some people get to<br />
Africa and get just a little too<br />
comfortable.’”<br />
Her graciousness was<br />
especially apparent every<br />
New Year’s Day at her<br />
home when she hosted a<br />
daylong, sumptuous buffet,<br />
where people from all walks<br />
of life gathered for food,<br />
conversation and laughter.<br />
For many, it became the<br />
mandatory kickoff to the year.<br />
“She created an<br />
environment where everyone<br />
Petersen<br />
Continued from A1<br />
Burke-class destroyer,<br />
DDG 121, will be named<br />
Frank E. Petersen Jr.,<br />
in honor of the Marine<br />
Corps lieutenant general<br />
who was the first Black<br />
Marine Corps aviator and<br />
the first Black Marine<br />
Corps general officer.<br />
Mabus said during<br />
the announcement<br />
“The courage and<br />
perseverance of Lt. Gen.<br />
Petersen throughout<br />
his distinguished and<br />
ground-breaking career<br />
make him especially<br />
deserving of this honor.”<br />
He continued, “Those<br />
could be together and get<br />
along,” said A’Lelia Bundles,<br />
former Washington deputy<br />
bureau chief for ABC News,<br />
an award winning producer<br />
and biographer of her greatgreat-grandmother<br />
Madam<br />
C.J. Walker.<br />
“The genius and beauty<br />
of Gwen was she could be<br />
friends with people across<br />
ideologies,” Bundles said.<br />
“She took journalism<br />
seriously and didn’t want to<br />
be seen as partisan, so much<br />
so that those who tried to<br />
accuse her of it were quickly<br />
set straight. She was so<br />
graceful about it. She just<br />
never flinched.”<br />
Bundles also noted Ifill’s<br />
steadfast devotion to women<br />
friends, showing up for major<br />
events, dinners, get-togethers<br />
despite a hectic schedule.<br />
“She was the busiest<br />
among us; had the highest<br />
profile, carried the biggest<br />
burden of all of us, but she<br />
showed up for her girls.”<br />
In addition to cousin<br />
Sherrilyn Ifill, survivors<br />
include her brothers Roberto<br />
Ifill of Silver Spring and the<br />
Rev. Earle Ifill of Atlanta, and<br />
a sister Maria Ifill Phillip, also<br />
of Silver Spring.<br />
Jackie Jones is chair<br />
of the Dept. of Multimedia<br />
Journalism at Morgan State<br />
University’s School of Global<br />
Journalism & Communication<br />
and a former colleague of<br />
Gwen Ifill’s at ‘The Evening<br />
Sun.’<br />
Courtesy photo<br />
A graphic representation of the future USS Frank E. Petersen<br />
Jr.<br />
who serve aboard DDG 121 will, for decades, carry on the storied legacy of this Marine Corps<br />
hero.”<br />
Construction began on the future USS Frank E. Petersen Jr. (DDG 121) April 27 at the<br />
Huntington Ingalls Industries shipyard in Pascagoula, Miss.<br />
In 1950, two years after President Harry S. Truman desegregated the armed forces, Petersen<br />
enlisted in the Navy. Two years later, in 1952, Petersen was commissioned as a second lieutenant<br />
in the Marine Corps. He would go on to fly 350 combat missions during the Korean and Vietnam<br />
Wars. Petersen also went on to become the first Black in the Marine Corps to command a fighter<br />
squadron, an air group and a major base.<br />
Petersen retired from the Marine Corps in 1988 after 38 years of service. At the time of his<br />
retirement he was the senior-ranking aviator in the Marine Corps and the United States Navy.<br />
“It’s a tremendous honor, said Dana Moore, Petersen’s second of five children. “It’s a<br />
destroyer but in its description it will have a peacekeeping mission as well as being prepared<br />
for battle. It was only as a last resort that he would want to do battle and I think it’s the perfect<br />
embodiment of him. It’s a tremendous honor and we’re thankful to the Navy,” said Moore, owner<br />
and founder of Baltimore based law firm Petersen Moore.
November 12, 19, 2016 - November 12, 25, 2016, The Afro-American A3 A5<br />
Continued from A1<br />
hit the vote-getting trail again for St. Paul, Minn,: Pittsburgh<br />
and several other cities. From all appearances and other<br />
indications, the Governor was well-pleased with his crosscountry<br />
hop. He did not even seem tired as he shook hands<br />
with reporters and friends as they parted.<br />
A poll conducted by the AFRO-AMERICAN in 15 cities<br />
and towns reveals that it is generally believed that Dewey will<br />
replace Truman in the White House Jan. 20.<br />
However, most colored persons contacted admitted that<br />
they were going to cast “sympathy ballots” for Truman or<br />
Wallace.<br />
“I do not believe that Truman will be re-elected,” I was<br />
told “but if he thought enough of us to stick his neck out on<br />
his civil rights program, the least we can do is to show our<br />
appreciation by voting for him in November.”<br />
83% SEE DEWEY IN THE WHITE HOUSE<br />
I asked three questions of the 181 persons polled: “Who<br />
do you think will win the Presidential Election? For whom do<br />
you plan to vote? Why?”<br />
To the first question, 83 percent of the persons answered,<br />
Congress<br />
Continued from A1<br />
“Since 1971, the CBC has consistently been the voice for<br />
people of color and vulnerable communities, and we remain<br />
committed to our work to ensure that all U.S. citizens have an<br />
opportunity to achieve the American dream.”<br />
The CBC will have the highest number in its history with 48<br />
House members and two of the three Black U.S. senators, Cory<br />
Booker (D-N.J.) and Kamala Harris (D-Calif.). Sen. Tim Scott<br />
(R-S.C.) and Rep. Will Hurd (R-Texas) have chosen not to join<br />
the CBC.<br />
The new members of the CBC include Harris, the first Black<br />
woman elected to her body since Carol Moseley Braun of<br />
Illinois served from 1993-1999; Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.),<br />
a former Delaware secretary of labor; Val Demings (D-Fla.),<br />
who served as Orlando’s first Black female police chief; Al<br />
Lawson (D-Fla.), who replaces Rep. Corrine Brown (D-Fla.);<br />
Donald McEachin (D-Va.), represents a newly created district<br />
in the Old Dominion; Dwight Evans (D-Pa.) takes the place of<br />
former Rep. Chaka Fattah; and Anthony Brown (D-Md.), the<br />
former lieutenant governor of the Free State.<br />
“Dewey.” They gave as their reason: “President Truman has<br />
divorced himself from many white voters, North and South,<br />
because they are afraid that he will put the colored man on<br />
equality with them, therefore, Dewey will be put into office<br />
by a white-bloc vote.”<br />
47 percent of the voters stated unconditionally that they<br />
were casting their ballot for President Truman, giving as their<br />
grounds of course, his civil rights program.<br />
YOUTH FOR WALLACE<br />
Backed mostly by younger voters, Wallace pooled 21<br />
percent of the total, these being convinced that “his recent<br />
stand against segregation in the South is enough to wipe out<br />
all his unfavorable past.”<br />
They admitted that he could not win, but that he was<br />
headed in the right direction and should be encouraged by the<br />
colored peoples ballot.<br />
Dewey ran third with 16 percent of the promised ballots.<br />
His supporters would vote on his record on racial issues in New<br />
York.<br />
Brown told the AFRO in a voice message that he thanked<br />
his supporters on Election Day and “pledged to work hard for<br />
“The great thing about these<br />
new members is that they<br />
just don’t represent African-<br />
American communities.”<br />
– Paul Brathwaite<br />
the people of the Fourth Congressional District in Maryland.”<br />
Brown will replace Rep. Donna Edwards, who didn’t run for<br />
re-election to her seat and lost her bid to replace Sen. Barbara<br />
TO MAKE STAND KNOWN<br />
Many colored persons admitted a complete ignorance<br />
of Dewey’s performance in New York. They felt that if he<br />
could promise the people of the West favorable legislation, he<br />
should take a stand on the civil rights issue.<br />
A spokesman on Dewey’s staff stated that Dewey would<br />
make an address on civil rights later in the campaign.<br />
16 percent of the voters had not made up their minds.<br />
ONE INCIDENT MARS TRIP<br />
The tour aboard the “Dewey Victory Special” was quite<br />
successful with only one incident to mar an otherwise perfect<br />
trip.<br />
In Cheyenne, Wyo., Lem Graves, Pittsburgh Courier<br />
correspondent, and I were refused service in the dining room<br />
of the Hotel Plains, where Dewey and all the party were<br />
putting up. We were told by the manager, after waiting for<br />
about one hour, that “we would not be served as colored<br />
persons had never been served there.”<br />
Otherwise we were permitted free-run of the hotel.<br />
Mikulski. Mikulski’s seat was won by Chris Van Hollen, a<br />
Democrat.<br />
Rochester, on her Facebook page, talked about her historymaking<br />
election and pledged to work hard for her constituents<br />
when sworn into office. “I’m honored to be the first woman and<br />
person of color to represent Delaware in the halls of Congress,”<br />
she said. “This is only the beginning of our journey and I<br />
cannot do it alone. I am looking forward to working with you<br />
to create a better world for our children.”<br />
Evans said that the upcoming Trump administration will not<br />
stop him from working on a bipartisan basis to get things done.<br />
“The results of the presidential election isn’t defeat, it’s a call<br />
to keep fighting because the best work that we’ve done – we’ve<br />
done together,” he said. “While we try to stomach this new<br />
landscape in our government, rest assured we will keep making<br />
our communities stronger together, block by block. Because<br />
democracy demands that we listen to each other – and when<br />
we do so, we can make great strides for all Philadelphians, all<br />
Pennsylvanians, and all Americans.”