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  • For Black women, the story of voting rights is a long one.

  • Very early on at the dawn of the 19th century, they are already at work on a political philosophy that decries racism

  • and sexism in American politics. But constitutionally speaking, it begins with the 15th Amendment

  • because Black women also need race to be an impermissible criteria if they are to get

  • to the polls. Sojourner Truth is a name people might know.

  • The former slave, antislavery activist and women's rights activist. Francis Ellen Watkins

  • Harper, poet, antislavery lecturer. We also have figures like Nannie Helen Burroughs,

  • Ida B. Wells was another major activist that people don't necessarily associate with the

  • suffrage movement, but she absolutely was. Black women never find a very comfortable

  • home in women's suffrage associations, racism is always present, sometimes in very pronounced

  • ways. We have pictures of parades, marches, women dressed up in sort of late 19th, early

  • 20th century Victorian gear, hats, large hats, carrying signs about votes for women. And

  • most of these images are of white women. The key figures are a remarkable duo of women--Elizabeth

  • Cady Stanton and Susan B. AnthonyAnd those two women will take us to the 19th Amendment.

  • In August of 1920, the state of Tennessee will, by a mere one vote, ratify the 19th

  • Amendment ,an amendment that prohibits the states from using sex as a criteria for voting

  • and it will become part of the Constitution.And American women win the right to vote. So,

  • for a white woman, it was the end of a long fight. But for many black women, it was just

  • the beginning of an uphill battle to exercise those rights. African American women are aware,

  • but really everyone is aware that nothing in the 19th Amendment is going to prohibit

  • individual states from continuing to disenfranchise Black voters.

  • And so the 19th Amendment, even as we mark this anniversary

  • It leaves many, many American women to continue the struggle for political rights,

  • including the vote. And African American women are one chapter or one facet of that story.

  • There's nothing in the 19th Amendment that guarantees Chinese immigrant women the vote.

  • There's nothing in the 19th Amendment that guarantees to Native American women the vote

  • Latin X women, particularly Mexican American women, also occupy an ambiguous place in the

  • story of voting rights. For Black women, the right to vote is symbolic. And that's not

  • to diminish symbolism, it's to say that the right to vote is a sign that they are full

  • and equal citizens of the United States. African American women are facing the challenges of racial

  • violence, lynching and access to the polls. African American women are looking at a range

  • of inequalities, economic inequalities, housing inequalities, health inequalities, educational

  • inequalities, and access to the ballot is a lever in those struggles. It is the gateway

  • to sitting on juries. It is the gateway to office holding. Black women have an agenda,

  • and it is an ambitious one, and one they hope the vote will help them further.

  • What did the white people have to fear from so many Blacks registering?

  • What Black women want in the wake of the 19th Amendment

  • is federal legislation that will now protect their voting rights... to impose on those

  • states with a history of disenfranchising Black voters, an extra requirement. And Black

  • women will wage a campaign that will take them all the way to 1965 and passage of the

  • Voting Rights Act in that year. It's important to say that winning the Voting Rights Act

  • is a brutal, brutal campaign. Black Americans, women and men put their lives on the line

  • in too many southern jurisdictions in order to force the hand of Congress, to force the

  • hand of Lyndon Johnson to win voting rights legislation. This is not an easy road for

  • African American women. It is a harrowing road. But it is indeed a victory, one that

  • Black women had been looking for for nearly half a century.

  • I know that my grandmother raised my mother, that they always had to vote like it was something

  • that she was born in. My grandmother, Susie Jones. Her portrait hangs on the wall. And

  • I am very accountable to her even as she passed many years ago. People ask me...

  • Today, we live in an era of voter suppression. Laws that are neutral

  • on their face. Voter I.D. requirements or the purging of voter rolls, or the shuttering

  • of polling places, none of which announce that they are aimed at keeping voters of color,

  • women of color from the polls. But when we look at those laws in practice, we can recognize

  • that like in 1920, in 2020, seemingly neutral laws are being used to disproportionately

  • keep people of color away from the polls.

  • By running for political office and effecting

  • change on the ground in their communities, in their statewe now have Black women

  • running for governorships. And we have a number of African Americans that we've seen has shaped

  • elections. So I think that the idea of enfranchisement is also expanded to not just being able to

  • vote, but exercising political power and exercising political agency. And I think that's the legacy

  • of the suffrage movement To me, these are not women who dropped out

  • of the sky. These are women who come out of a political tradition and are building upon

  • that. And will tell you that if you ask them. These women and the generations that followed

  • worked to make democracy and opportunity real in the lives of all of us who followed.

For Black women, the story of voting rights is a long one.

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