From statewide races like the lieutenant governor to several judicial seats, Georgia voters once again have an opportunity to choose their champion. 

Opinion

Black people have a chance to hold elected officials accountable during the 2022 primary season.

The chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee announced he was running for election to challenge Rep. Mondaire Jones, the type of incumbent Democratic House candidate the group was created to support.

Concerned voters should ask Beasley about the facts related to her record, not narratives that seek to distort her tenure.

There is no Senate version of Pressley, Coleman, Lee or Rep. Cori Bush to share their voice and experience as Black women grappling with these issues.

In a new video, Jessica Knight-Henry, deputy executive director at the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee draws a connection between abortion bans and increased restrictions on maternal health outcomes.

Politics

Brown won by a much larger margin than in the August special election, easily taking more than 66 percent of the total vote. 

Discounting the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and economic downturn in 2020 proves that Fox and the Manhattan Institute are not interested in a genuine conversation on the issues. 

Opinion

Black women currently have no representation in the Senate, and there has never been a Black woman governor.

Missouri Democratic State Senator Steven Roberts, who has been accused of rape more than once, may be preparing to launch a primary campaign against progressive incumbent Congresswoman Cori Bush, who has been outspoken about her own experience as a victim of sexual assault.

The Black Ballot

NewsOne partnered with Black Voters Matter to document the annual commemoration of the Bloody Sunday marches from Selma to Montgomery in Alabama and help draw attention to the urgent importance of participating in the 2022 midterm elections.

The alleged concern about the electability of Black women candidates in statewide elections is grounded in fiction that voters won’t support them. Black women need more than gracious accolades. “The thank you era is over.”