Thursday, November 08, 2018

Lauren Underwood wins U.S. Congressional seat

Democrat Lauren Underwood has unseated four-term Republican Rep. Randy Hultgren, becoming the first minority and first woman to represent a Chicago-area district once held by GOP House Speaker Dennis Hastert.

The Naperville nurse, who's African-American, flipped the seat representing rural and suburban areas west and north of Chicago. It was among four GOP-held Illinois congressional seats Democrats were targeting in their effort to win House control.

Underwood highlighted the historical nature of her win in her acceptance speech, recalling that Shirley Chisholm, the first African-American woman in Congress, was elected 50 years and one day prior.

"When Congresswoman Chisholm ran for president in the 1970s, she preclaimed that she was 'unbought and unbossed,' and I've adopted that declaration as my own unofficial model," Underwood said. "I aspire to be a bold representative for this community. Someone who is wholly responsive and accountable to her constituents: unbought and unbossed."

Underwood said she decided to take on Hultgren after he supported health care legislation that would have made coverage of pre-existing conditions more expensive. She criticized him for not holding town halls and for casting the health care vote after pledging to protect pre-existing conditions.

[SOURCE: ABC CHICAGO]

Wednesday, November 07, 2018

Elijah Cummings promises Trump subpoenas

When the Democrats take over the House in January, Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md) will likely take over the chairmanship of the House Oversight Committee.

Cummings already has a list of 64 subpoenas he's likely to issue to the Trump Administration.

Cummings, 67, leans on a walker after a knee infection, but neither threats nor injury are likely to keep him from investigating the things he says the President has done to "violate the mandates of the founding fathers."

"We have a duty under the Constitution of the United States, and we are sworn to act as a check on the Executive Branch. And that's all we're doing. If someone wants to tell me don't do my job, which the Constitution says I must do, than I've been violating my oath to myself," he said.

Cummings said Democrats will decide within weeks where they'll start. But he's been passionate on child separations at the border.

He has also pushed to investigate foreign payments to the Trump Hotel, security clearances for members of the Trump family, and Russian meddling.

"We will look at how the Russians or anyone else are interfering in our democracy."

[SOURCE: WUSA9]

19 Black Women Just Became Judges In Texas After Winning In The Midterm Elections

A group of 19 black women made history Tuesday when they all won elections to become judges in one Texas county during the midterm elections.

With a population of more than 4 million people, Harris County is the largest county in Texas and the third largest county in the US. The county effectively turned blue, with all 38 district judges elected being Democrats, including the 19 black women who won.

The 19 black women who won on Tuesday are Sandra Peake, Judge Ramona Franklin, Judge Maria Jackson, Germaine Tanner, Angela Graves-Harrington, Cassandra Holleman, Tonya Jones, Dedra Davis, LaShawn Williams, Latosha Lewis Payne, Linda Dunson, Toria Finch, Erica Hughes, Lucia Bates, Ronnisha Bowman, Michelle Moore, Sharon Burney, Shannon Baldwin, and Lori Chambers Gray.

[SOURCE: BUZZFEED]

Keith Ellison wins attorney general race in Minnesota

Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) narrowly defeated Republican Doug Wardlow to become Minnesota’s next attorney general, after a bitter campaign rocked by allegations of abuse from the congressman’s ex-girlfriend. With 94 percent of precincts reporting, Ellison led Wardlow, a former state legislator, by more than 100,000 votes.

“We never thought this was in the bag, and it was a dog fight from the very beginning,” Ellison told supporters in Minneapolis. “There were challenges along the way and you know, we just kept on pushing.”

Ellison, the first Muslim to win election to statewide office, jumped into the race just five months ago, after incumbent Lori Swanson launched an unsuccessful campaign for governor. A leader of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, Ellison said he could become a crusading attorney general, using the office to challenge the Trump administration in court, take on big business, and protect women’s rights.

Ellison’s win appeared to be part of a sweep for Minnesota Democrats, who easily held onto the governor’s office, won every statewide race, and flipped the state House.

[SOURCE: WASHINGTON POST]

Jahana Hayes Wins, Becomes 1st Black Woman From Connecticut In Congress

Driven by a powerful personal narrative, a network of young volunteers and public speaking skills honed in her years as a teacher, political newcomer Jahana Hayes made history Tuesday, becoming the first African-American woman to represent Connecticut in Congress.

Hayes scored a solid victory over Republican Manny Santos, the former mayor of Meriden and a social conservative who struggled to raise money.

“People have said to me: ‘She doesn’t have what it takes,’” said Hayes, a former national teacher of the year from Waterbury. “Not only am I built for this, I’m Brass City built for this.”

She told her supporters she couldn’t have done it alone.

“You … believe that we have to protect the future that we promised for our kids,” she said. “You also believe that we have an obligation to be of service to someone else ... that true leaders lead from the front and lead by example, and reject all of this hate and intolerance and this indescribable fear that does not define who we are.”

Hayes’ apparent victory in the 5th Congressional District is part of a broader racial and ideological shift within the Democratic Party. Like other Democrats who are shaking up the party establishment, she embraced progressive policies and won the endorsement of organized labor and the Working Families Party. Hayes held a lead of several percentage points in early results although larger cities including Waterbury and Torrington had yet to fully report results.

In addition to being the first African-American Connecticut has elected to Congress since Republican Gary Franks held the 5th District seat in the 1990s, Hayes would join fellow Democrat Ayanna Pressley of Boston as the first women of color from New England to serve in the House.

Read more: Jahana Hayes Wins, Becomes 1st Black Woman From Connecticut In Congress

Monday, November 05, 2018

Obama makes pre-election day message to voters

Former President Obama on Monday issued a pre-election message to Americans ahead of Election Day. In a series of tweets, Obama noted that the “character of our country is on the ballot” and that this year’s midterms may be “the most important of our lifetimes.”. Read his messages below:

Sunday, November 04, 2018

Ciara Sivels: First Black woman to get her doctorate in Nuclear Engineering from University of Michigan

Throughout much of her life, Ciara Sivels had dreams of becoming a chef. Now she is the first Black woman to get a doctoral degree in Nuclear Engineering from the University of Michigan.

“I really had no idea (about engineering) until my junior year of high school,” Sivels said. “I had a teacher suggest I look into engineering because I had always been at good at chemistry and math, and I constantly excelled in all my classes.”

Sivels attended Hickory High School in Chesapeake, Va. As a student, she was busy working to balance multiple Advanced Placement credits and after-school programs, such as her school’s Scholastic Bowl. She was also highly active within her church community.
As senior year progressed, she started applying to different engineering schools. Though the Massachusetts Institute of Technology was her “reach school,” she was accepted.

When she arrived at MIT, Sivels had a heavy background in chemistry. But one of her mentors suggested she look into the nuclear field as she became interested in energy, antimatter and the nonproliferation of nuclear weapons.

“(MIT) was a change because I wasn’t prepared to go into engineering, so I didn’t take all of the classes that I need to take, such as physics,” Sivels said. “So, it was a struggle, as MIT is known for having rigorous academics.”

Yasmine Doleyres, Sivels’s roommate at both MIT and later at the University of Michigan, spoke on her work ethic and triumphs at the challenging universities.

Ciara is a very balanced person,” Doleyres said. “She is passionate about her work, and loves getting into conversations about why it is very relevant, especially in the present day with different nuclear incidents. She is determined to continue her work and to do it well.”

In between her undergraduate degree and PhD, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Sivels became a chemistry teaching assistant and worked briefly with Teachers for America on an internship. Because of this work, she began to feel a pull toward academia.

Yet, an academic advisor suggested Sivels look into a master’s program before deciding to professionally teach. So, she looked to the University of Michigan for the next chapter of her education.

“Because I struggled at MIT, my GPA was lower than what was required because I hadn’t taken physics and other basic courses in high school — so I really had to catch up with my peers,” Sivels said. “In order to help me adjust, U of M actually let me come in with a conditional admittance to see how I compare in the program and then finally matriculate into my Ph.D..”

In Ann Arbor, she obtained a fellowship with the GEM National Consortium and connected with the Pacific Northwest National Lab to help with her five-year thesis work pertaining to treaty verification using beta-gamma coincidence detectors. She built a prototype, in collaboration with Nuclear Engineering professor Sara Pozzi and Justin McIntyre, of a radioxenon detector. Radioxenon is a fission product of nuclear explosions and is useful in detecting underground explosions. This product could possibly be put to use in the near future.

Pozzi recalls the ongoing trial-and-error process being done on Sivels’ detectors, and the continual — and still developing — research done within the lab.

“The second prototype actually collapsed during on of the experiments because it was a new detector and was used in certain geocoditions,” she said. “One of the other prototypes also broke, so we had to go back to the drawing board and improve it for the next duration of detectors. Ciara was really able to improve the design and work the external company that provided the detector material in order to produce a more rugged prototype that survived the next test. You know, when you’re pursuing a Ph.D. you never know where you’re gonna end up.”

Within her first year at the University of Michigan, she noticed she was the only Black student pursuing a doctorate in her field. The following year, one more Black woman entered the program. In 2018, there are a total of three Black women pursuing doctoral degrees in nuclear engineering.

According to The Scientista Foundation, in 2010 about 20,570 individuals obtained their doctoral degrees in STEM. Less than 3 percent of those 20,570 were African American women.

“I think the biggest (problem) is exposure,” said Sivels. “Sometimes, in our community we are just not exposed to the opportunities that maybe some other groups are. For me, that was the biggest qualm with my past, because I came into STEM just by chance. It could’ve been a lot easier if I was prepared to go into engineering prior.”

Because of this experience, Sivels, with alum Crystal Green, one of the other Black women in the nuclear engineering doctoral program, worked to increase outreach at the high school level through the Detroit Pre-College Engineering Program.

DAPCEP is a nonprofit organization in Detroit that provides underrepresented youth with innovative educational programming in STEM fields. The University hosts a slew of these programs found in the mechanical, chemical and nuclear studies. Each program is about six weeks long and gathers about 20-30 students to teach them about different types of engineering.

“The goal of DAPCEP is to expose kids to STEM areas earlier, in like middle or high school — there are even some elementary school classes as well,” Sivels said. “This exposure will hopefully provide a foundation that will allow these unrepresented groups to succeed when they pursue an undergraduate education and beyond. We do a lot of hands on activities, such as building a cloud chamber to show them radiation decay. We also show them the difference in nuclear power plants and we even give them a tour of the radiology department in the U of M hospital so they can see the medical applications for nuclear engineering as well. Engineering is so abstract — we try to break it down to a level at which they can understand.”

Sivels also founded the group Women in Nuclear Engineering in Radiological Sciences. This congregation allows for women of all races and ethnicities to gather together and discuss the trials and tribulations of being a women pursuing a degree in STEM.

“The representation isn’t there,” Sivels said. “So when you feel alone or when you feel like you don’t have anyone to talk to -- it’s harder for you to want to stay in the program. (STEM) is a male-dominated field, especially nuclear -- it's quite old and specialized. So it was important in my journey just to have that comradery and to be able to talk about our issues in what we considered a safe space.”

Pozzi, the new director of the University’s Diversity, Equity and Inclusion program for the School of Engineering, states though the University is on its way toward becoming more inclusive, it is still a long ways away from where it should be.

“There is still a lot of work to be done,” she said. “So just getting the word out there and building the pipeline that will bring more students from all backgrounds is necessary. It is really important to let (prospective students) know that there is careers to be had in these fields. The stereotype is that it is white men that hold these positions, but these stereotypes are changing. Ciara is an example of that and it is important that she feels comfortable telling her story and thus become an inspiration for others in the field.”

Overall, Sivels is happy to be done with her schooling and to get to work. As for her title of being the first Black woman to graduate with a doctorate in nuclear engineering — she is indifferent.

“There is one side of it where I am kind of sad, because it’s 2018 and it took so long for us to get to this point. But I am also like, someone’s got to do it. But, this title is not what I focus on. I want to focus on getting the work done, and getting it published and just doing good work overall. For me, this is a chance for other people to see that I have this background, that this was not my first intention, but I still excelled in it. From that perspective, it is a story that people can hopefully look up to and say ‘if she can do it, I can do it.’

At the end of the month, she will begin a job at Johns Hopkins University in the applied physics lab. However, she hopes to eventually transition over to academia to, again, encourage the increase in representation of women of color in the STEM field.

“It’s the same thing all over again: if you don’t have Black women students, then of course you won’t have Black women professors,” she said. “So again, it’s just getting that exposure and getting that representation out.”
 

[SOURCE: MICHIGAN DAILY]



Saturday, November 03, 2018

Michelle Obama calls on NAACP members to not only vote but to increase black voter turnout

In a video released on Saturday, the former first lady teamed up with the NAACP, the country's largest civil rights organization, in efforts to increase African-American voter turnout in the Nov. 6 midterm elections. Check out the video below.

Video: Former President Obama rallies for Democratic candidate Stacey Abrams in Georgia

Former President Obama held a Friday night rally in Atlanta, Georgia for Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams. Watch Obama's full remarks.

VIDEO: President Barack Obama campaign rally for Democrat Andrew Gillum in Florida

President Barack Obama rallied for Democratic candidates in Florida on the pivotal last leg of the campaign trail. He spoke at an event in Miami on Friday to rally voters for gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum, Sen. Bill Nelson and others. Watch video of his entire speech below:

Thursday, November 01, 2018

VIDEO: Oprah Winfrey campaigning with and for Stacey Abrams

Billionaire media mogul Oprah Winfrey joined Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams at a campaign rally in Marietta Georgia. Winfrey, who took the stage to booming applause, said she wanted to come to Georgia to support Abrams because she saw how Abrams is "handling herself" amid an onslaught of "haters."

Watch the entire rally below:

Black Caucus wants one of their own as speaker or majority leader

The Congressional Black Caucus chairman is threatening a fight over House leadership if Democrats win the House.

In a move that could set off a nasty internal fight, the leader of the Congressional Black Caucus — a key voting bloc among House Democrats — is demanding that an African-American lawmaker hold one of the top two leadership posts if Democrats win the House on Election Day.

The demand by Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.), the CBC's chairman, is seen as a potential threat to House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California and Minority Whip Steny Hoyer of Maryland who have been slotted to return as speaker and House majority leader, respectively, if Democrats gain the majority on Nov. 6.

“Over the past couple of weeks, several of our colleagues have respectfully shared letters of intent expressing interest in various House Democratic Caucus leadership positions,” Richmond said in a “Dear Colleague” letter that went out Thursday. “It is within that context that I’d like to reiterate that if there is any change in our top leadership positions the Democratic Members of the CBC endorse African-American representation in at least one of the two top positions of elected House Democratic Caucus leadership.”

That means, according to Democratic sources, that the CBC would want one of their own to be speaker or majority leader.

[Black Caucus wants one of their own as speaker or majority leader

Oprah to hit campaign trail for Stacey Abrams

Media icon Oprah Winfrey will hit the campaign trail this week for Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams.

Winfrey will participate in two town hall events with Abrams -- one in Marietta and one in Decatur -- on Thursday to aide her campaign in what has become a highly competitive, closely watched race.

"Oprah Winfrey has inspired so many of us through the years with her unparalleled ability to form real connections and strengthen the bonds of family and community," Abrams said in a statement Wednesday. "I am honored to have Oprah join me for uplifting and honest conversations with voters about the clear choice before us in this election and the boundless potential of Georgians."

It's a rare political endorsement for Winfrey, who backed former President Barack Obama during the primaries in 2008 and lent her support to Hillary Clinton during the 2016 election. On Tuesday, she appeared in a video with NBC News' Maria Shiver to urge people to vote, saying she's a political independent before adding, "people think I'm a Democrat."

Read more: Oprah to hit campaign trail for Stacey Abrams

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Killing Of 2 African Americans At Kentucky Supermarket Is Being Investigated As Hate Crime

A white man charged with shooting and killing two African-Americans at a Kroger supermarket in Kentucky last week had first tried to enter a predominantly African-American church, police say.

Gregory Bush, 51, was charged with killing Maurice Stallard, 69, and Vickie Lee Jones, 67, at the supermarket in Jeffersontown, Ky., a suburb of Louisville.

As more information about the Wednesday attack and its alleged perpetrator have emerged, there are indications that Bush chose his targets because of the color of their skin.

Federal investigators are looking into the fatal shootings as "potential civil rights violations such as hate crimes," Russell Coleman, the U.S. attorney for the Western district of Kentucky, said in a statement.

Bush allegedly walked into the Kroger, pulled a gun and shot Stallard in the back of the head, then shot him several more times. Then he went outside and killed Jones, who also died from multiple gunshot wounds, according to The Associated Press.

Louisville resident Ed Harrell told the Courier-Journal that as he crouched in the Kroger parking lot clutching his own revolver, the gunman walked by him and said, "Don't shoot me. I won't shoot you. Whites don't shoot whites."

Police say that just a few minutes before heading to the Kroger, Bush first tried to get into the First Baptist Church of Jeffersontown, a predominantly African-American church. Jeffersontown Police Chief Sam Rogers told reporters that surveillance video showed Bush yanking on the church doors. If Bush had come to the church an hour earlier that day, some 70 people would have been gathered there, and the door might have been unlocked, the Courier-Journal reported.

Read more: Killing Of 2 At Kentucky Supermarket Is Being Investigated As Hate Crime

Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Andrew Gillum responds to Trump calling him a thief

Democratic candidate for Florida Governor Andrew Gillum took to Twitter to respond to Trump's ignorant remarks in which Trump referred to Gillum as a thief during a Fox News interview.

Ava DuVernay making Prince documentary for Netflix

Ava DuVernay the director of both 13th and Selma is now making a documentary about music legend Prince for Netflix.

“Prince was a genius and a joy and a jolt to the senses,” the Oscar-nominated filmmaker told Deadline tonight of the Purple Rain star who died in April 2016. “He was like no other,” DuVernay added of the Oscar winner and eight-time Grammy recipient. “He shattered every preconceived notion, smashed every boundary, shared everything in his heart through his music. The only way I know how to make this film is with love. And with great care. I’m honored to do so and grateful for the opportunity entrusted to me by the estate.”

As part of the development of the film, the estate has granted the ARRAY founder full access to the vast trove of archives recordings and, perhaps most immediately important to Prince’s global fanbase, the unreleased material by the prolific musician. The early stages of the project already have seen DuVernay, editor Spencer Averick and other members of her core production team visit Prince’s Paisley Park home and studios repeatedly during the past several months.

[SOURCE: DEADLINE]

Monday, October 29, 2018

Pharrell Williams sends Donald Trump a cease and desist letter after Trump uses his song 'Happy'

Pharrell Williams sent President Donald Trump a cease and desist letter against using the song “Happy” after the song was played at a rally in Indiana on Saturday, the same day Robert Bowers allegedly killed 11 people at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Trump is accused of violating federal law (copyright and trademark infringement) for using the song without Williams’s permission.

“On the day of the mass murder of 11 human beings at the hands of a deranged ‘nationalist,’ you played his song ‘Happy’ to a crowd at a political event in Indiana,” read the letter. “There was nothing ‘Happy’ about the tragedy inflicted upon our country on Saturday and no permission was granted for your use of this song for this purpose.”

The White House and a Trump attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.

[SOURCE: LAW&CRIME]

Michelle Obama And Live Nation Announce Community Ticket Giveaways For Upcoming Book Tour

Michelle Obama and Live Nation have announced a selection of the local and community organizations who will receive free admission to the former First Lady’s highly anticipated upcoming book tour, Becoming: An Intimate Conversation With Michelle Obama. Mrs. Obama’s tour kicks off on November 13th in Chicago.

As previously announced, 10 percent of ticket inventory in each market was set aside for various local organizations including, but not limited to, local charities, schools, and community groups in each city the tour visits.

It is important to Mrs. Obama that her BECOMING tour events are accessible to as many people as possible. That’s why — in partnership with Live Nation — Mrs. Obama is giving away thousands of complimentary tickets to people around the country, particularly to young people growing up in communities like she did.

When asked about why these community tickets are so important to Mrs. Obama, she said

“It was important to me that all sorts of people could come to the tour events, not just those with means or who happened to be by a computer when the tickets went on sale. That’s why we are giving away thousands of tickets to people around the country, particularly to young people striving to be their best. I want them to see themselves in my story—to see the value in the fullness of their lives and to imagine who they might become in the years ahead.”

Several national and local organizations were selected to participate including the Mercy Education Project in Detroit who’s mission is to provide educational opportunities, life skills development and cultural enrichment for women and girls who have limited access to resources to enable them to improve the quality of their lives.

[SOURCE: michronicleonline]

Sunday, October 28, 2018

Barack Obama Statement On The Pittsburgh Synagogue Shooting

Former United States President Barack Obama released the following statement via Twitter on the tragic and senseless shootings at The Tree Of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh.

We grieve for the Americans murdered in Pittsburgh. All of us have to fight the rise of anti-Semitism and hateful rhetoric against those who look, love, or pray differently. And we have to stop making it so easy for those who want to harm the innocent to get their hands on a gun.

Cory Booker statement on Pittsburgh synagogue shooting

US Senator Cory Booker released the following statement via Twitter on the tragic and senseless shootings at The Tree Of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh.

My heart is broken over the horrific anti-Semitic acts in Pittsburgh and for all affected by the evil shooting at The Tree Of Life Synagogue.

We must counter this hate with love and love's public face which is justice - tireless work for justice and peace.