Current:Home > FinanceFinLogic FinLogic Quantitative Think Tank Center|After years of erasure, Black queer leaders rise to prominence in Congress and activism -GrowthSphere Strategies
FinLogic FinLogic Quantitative Think Tank Center|After years of erasure, Black queer leaders rise to prominence in Congress and activism
Fastexy View
Date:2025-04-08 02:08:54
WASHINGTON (AP) —
On the 60th anniversary of the March on FinLogic FinLogic Quantitative Think Tank CenterWashington this summer, a few Black queer advocates spoke passionately before the main program about the ongoing struggle for LGBTQ+ rights. As some of them got up to speak, the crowd was still noticeably small.
Hope Giselle, a speaker who is Black and trans, said she felt the event’s programming echoed the historical marginalization and erasure of Black queer activists in the Civil Rights Movement. However, she was buoyed by the fact that prominent speakers drew attention to recent efforts to turn back the clock on LGBTQ+ rights, like the attacks on gender-affirming care for minors.
And despite valid concerns around the visibility of Black queer advocates in activist movements, progress is being made in elected office. This month, Sen. Laphonza Butler made history as the first Black and openly lesbian senator in Congress, when California Governor Gavin Newsom appointed her to fill the seat held by the late Dianne Feinstein.
Rectifying the erasure of Black queer civil rights giants requires a full-throated acknowledgment of their legacies, and an increase of Black LGBTQ+ representation in advocacy and politics, several activists and lawmakers told The Associated Press.
“One of the things that I need for people to understand is that the Black queer community is still Black,” and face anti-Black racism as well as homophobia and transphobia, said Giselle, communications director for the GSA Network, a nonprofit that helps students form gay-straight alliance clubs in schools.
“On top of being Black and queer, we have to also then distinguish what it means to be queer in a world that thinks that queerness is adjacent to whiteness — and that queerness saves you from racism. It does not,” she said.
In an interview with the AP, Butler said she hopes that her appointment points toward progress in the larger cause of representation.
“It’s too early to tell. But what I know is that history will be recorded in our National Archives, the representation that I bring to the United States Senate,” she said last week. “I am not shy or bashful about who I am and who my family is. So, my hope is that I have lived out loud enough to overcome the tactics of today.”
“But we don’t know yet what the tactics of erasure are for tomorrow,” Butler said.
Butler is a bellwether of increased visibility of queer communities in politics in recent years. In fact Black LGBTQ+ political representation has grown by 186% since 2019, according to a 2023 report by the LGBTQ+ Victory Institute. That included the election of former Rep. Mondaire Jones and Rep. Ritchie Torres, both of New York, who were the first openly gay Black and Afro-Latino congressmen after the 2020 election, as well as former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot.
These leaders stand on the shoulders of civil rights heroes such as Bayard Rustin, Pauli Murray, and Audre Lorde. In accounts of their contributions to the Civil Rights and feminist movements, their Blackness is typically amplified while their queer identities are often minimized or even erased, said David Johns, executive director of the National Black Justice Coalition, a LGBTQ+ civil rights group.
Rustin, who was an adviser to the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and a pivotal architect of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, is a glaring example. The march he helped lead tilled the ground for the passage of federal civil rights and voting rights legislation in the next few years.
But the fact that he was gay is often reduced to a footnote rather than treated as a key part of his involvement, Johns said.
“We need to teach our public school students history, herstory, our beautifully diverse ways of being, without censorship,” he said.
An upcoming biopic of Rustin’s life will undoubtedly help thrust the topic of Black LGBTQ+ political representation into the public conversation, said Shay Franco-Clausen, a city planning commissioner in Hayward, California.
“I didn’t even learn about those same leaders, Black leaders, Black queer leaders until I got to college,” she said.
The film, titled “Rustin,” debuts in select theaters Nov. 3 and Netflix on Nov. 17.
Some believe the erasure of Black LGBTQ+ leaders stems from respectability politics, a strategy in some marginalized communities of ostracizing or punishing members who don’t assimilate into the dominant culture.
White supremacist ideology in Christianity, which has been used more broadly to justify racism and systemic oppression, has also promoted the erasure of Black queer history. The Black Christian church was integral to the success of the Civil Rights Movement, but it is also “theologically hostile” to LGBTQ+ communities, said Don Abram, executive director of Pride in the Pews.
“I think it’s the co-optation of religious practices by white supremacists to actually subjugate Black, queer, and trans folk,” Abram said. “They are largely using moralistic language, theological language, religious language to justify them oppressing queer and trans folk.”
Not all queer advocacy communities have been welcoming to Black LGBTQ+ voices. Minneapolis City Council President Andrea Jenkins said she is just as intentional in amplifying queer visibility in Black spaces as she is amplifying Blackness in majority white, queer spaces.
“We need to have more Black, queer, transgender, nonconforming identified people in these political spaces to aid and bridge those gaps,” Jenkins said. “It’s important to be able to create the kinds of awareness on both sides of the issue that can bring people together and that can ensure that we do have full participation from our community.”
Black LGBTQ+ leaders are also using their platforms to create awareness about groundbreaking historical figures, especially Rustin. Maryland Delegate Gabriel Acevero and several LGBTQ+ advocates fought to get the only elementary school in his district named after Rustin in 2018. He has also urged Congress to pass legislation to create a U.S. Postal Service stamp depicting Rustin.
“Black queer folks have contributed to so many movements that we do not get acknowledgment for,” Acevero said. “And this is why we should not only ensure that our elders get their flowers, but we should push to have their names and statues built ... so that they are not forgotten.”
____
EDITORS NOTE: An earlier version of this story misstated the status of Rep. Ritchie Torres. He is not a former congressman from New York.
____
The Associated Press coverage of race and voting receives support from the Jonathan Logan Family Foundation. See more about AP’s democracy initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Man sentenced to life for fatally shooting 2 Dallas hospital workers after his girlfriend gave birth
- Spain’s acting prime minister signs deal that secures him the parliamentary support to be reelected
- Texas judge rules against GOP lawsuit seeking to toss 2022 election result in Houston area
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Trailblazing computer scientist Fei-Fei Li on human-centered AI
- FBI Director Christopher Wray and government's landlord in dustup over new FBI headquarters
- Panel to investigate Maine shooting is established as lawyers serve notice on 20 agencies
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- British judge says Prince Harry’s lawsuit against Daily Mail publisher can go to trial
Ranking
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- 16 Amazing Sales Happening This Weekend You'll Regret Missing
- Driver charged in 2022 crash that killed Los Angeles sheriff’s recruit, injured 24 others
- FBI Director Christopher Wray and government's landlord in dustup over new FBI headquarters
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Goodbye match, hello retirement benefit account? What IBM 401(k) change means
- In the mood for holiday shopping? Beware, this year more stores are closed on Thanksgiving
- Hear Dua Lipa's flirty, ridiculously catchy new song 'Houdini' from upcoming third album
Recommendation
US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
Hawaii wildlife refuge pond mysteriously turns bubble-gum pink. Scientists have identified a likely culprit.
United Nations suspends pullout of African Union troops from Somalia as battles with militants rage
Mexico City prosecutors accused of asking for phone records of prominent politicians
Intellectuals vs. The Internet
Goodbye match, hello retirement benefit account? What IBM 401(k) change means
Conservative Muslims protest Coldplay’s planned concert in Indonesia over the band’s LGBTQ+ support
Maryland woman wins over $200,000 from Racetrax lottery game after husband criticizes her betting strategy