Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Jaime Harrison launching PAC to boost Democrats

Former South Carolina senatorial candidate Jaime Harrison has launched a political action committee to help Democrats get elected. Read his statement on the launch of the new PAC beliw:

POSSIBILITY & PROMISE

When we started this journey to bring hope back to our politics, we knew it would be hard and it would be long. Nothing worth doing is ever easy. We started a movement, a cause that brought millions of people together on this journey for unity and the future of America.

That journey— to heal our divisions, remind ourselves there is more that unites than divides us, that the real battles aren’t between right and left but between right and wrong, that journey, no matter how hard, must continue. That’s why today I am launching “Dirt Road PAC” to make sure the work goes on to protect democracy, elect leaders who will bring us together, and restore a belief in the promise of America.

The mission of the “Dirt Road PAC” will begin in the Senate runoffs in Georgia, continue to the 2021 elections in Virginia, work on voter registration and build to help candidates and parties across the country in the mid term elections in 2022.

For me, this journey started on a dirt road in rural South Carolina. To some that dirt road could be failing schools, shuttered hospitals or simply the hardships we are all facing these days. But make no mistake: While so many challenges remain, to me, we still travel on a road of possibility and promise.

Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Former New York City Mayor David Dinkins Dies at 93

David Dinkins, New York City’s first and only Black mayor, has died at 93.

Two senior NYPD officials confirmed to NBC New York that Dinkins' health aide found him unresponsive in his Lenox Hill apartment Monday night, having apparently died of natural causes. The former mayor died a little more than a month after his wife, Joyce Dinkins, passed away.

Born in Trenton, New Jersey, Dinkins briefly practicing law in New York City before he began his career in politics as a district leader and was elected a Harlem state Assemblyman in 1966. He went on to serve as President of the Board of Elections and City Clerk before winning election as Manhattan Borough President in 1985.

Dinkins, who also served in the Marines in Korea, ran for mayor in 1989 and defeated Mayor Edward I. Koch and he went on to defeat Rudy Giuliani by the narrowest electoral margin in New York City history: 47,000 votes.

During his term as mayor from 1990 to 1993, Dinkins vowed to be "mayor of all the people of New York," and declared: "We are all foot soldiers on the march to freedom."

He once called the Big Apple the "gorgeous mosaic." The former mayor lead the crackdown on violence crime, revitalization of Times Square, established Restaurant Week and Fashion Week.

Dinkins is survived by his two children and two grandchildren.

[SOURCE: NBC NY]

Monday, November 23, 2020

President-Elect Biden names Shuwanza Goff Deputy Director of the White House Office of Legislative Affairs

President-elect Joe Biden announced new members of his White House senior staff. He announced that Shuwanza Goff will be his Deputy Director of the White House Office of Legislative Affairs.

The Office of Legislative Affairs is responsible for advancing the President’s legislative agenda on Capitol Hill. Every day, the Legislative Affairs team is on the front lines, working with Senators, Representatives, and their staffs to promote the President’s priorities. Interns will work alongside staff members in the Senate and House liaison offices by helping notify Senators and Representatives about Administration initiatives, assisting with research on legislation and floor activity, and staffing legislative events.

Shuwanza Goff served as Floor Director for the House of Representatives under House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer. The first Black woman to hold the position, Goff determined which bills came to the House floor, set the legislative schedule, and helped craft the overall House Democratic agenda. Prior to that, Goff was Director of Legislative Operations for Representative Hoyer when he was minority whip. Goff has also served as Floor Aide, Floor Assistant, and Staff Assistant for Representative Hoyer. Originally from Virginia, Goff is a graduate of the University of Tennessee and American University.

Biden to nominate Linda Thomas-Greenfield to serve as United Nations Ambassador

Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield, a 35-year veteran of the U.S. Foreign Service who has served on four continents, will be nominated to serve as United Nations Ambassador and elevated the role to his Cabinet.

Retired Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield, a career diplomat, is returning to public service after retiring from a 35-year career with the U.S. Foreign Service in 2017. From 2013 to 2017 she served as the Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of African Affairs, where she led the bureau focused on the development and management of U.S. policy toward sub-Saharan Africa. Prior to this appointment, she served as Director General of the Foreign Service and Director of Human Resources (2012-2013), leading a team in charge of the State Department’s 70,000-strong workforce.

Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield’s distinguished Foreign Service career includes an ambassadorship to Liberia (2008-2012), and postings in Switzerland (at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations), Pakistan, Kenya, The Gambia, Nigeria, and Jamaica. In Washington, she served as Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Bureau of African Affairs (2006-2008), and as Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration (2004-2006).

Since 2017, Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield has led the Africa Practice at Albright Stonebridge Group, a strategic commercial diplomacy firm chaired by former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. She was also the inaugural Distinguished Resident Fellow in African Studies at the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy from fall 2017 to spring 2019. She joined ISD in spring 2017 as a Senior State Department Fellow. Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield earned a B.A. from Louisiana State University and a M.A. from the University of Wisconsin, where she worked towards a PhD. She received an honorary Doctor of Law degree from the University of Wisconsin in May 2018.

Sunday, November 22, 2020

10 Black students chosen as 2021 Rhodes Scholars

The Rhodes Trust announced the winners early Sunday, which include 22 students of color. Ten are Black, which ties the record for the most Black students elected in a single year. Congratulations to all 32 winners.

Meet the ten Black winners below:

Jeremy n. Thomas

Jeremy N. Thomas, Missouri City, Texas, is a senior at Amherst College, where he is completing double majors in English and Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought. Jeremy serves as student body president of the Association of Amherst Students and launched the campus’s first student-run Office of Student Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. He has also held numerous leadership roles in the Amherst College Black Student Union. His senior honors thesis analyzes limits on the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process clause, and he has published academic research on death row exonerations. At Oxford, Jeremy plans to pursue both an M.Sc. in Criminal Justice and Criminology and an M.Sc. in Comparative Social Policy.

Danielle N. Grey-Stewart

Danielle N. Grey-Stewart, Westbury, is a senior at MIT majoring in Materials Science and Engineering. A materials scientist who is passionate about social justice, Danielle has extensive independent research experience and is a student leader at MIT’s Center for Public Service. She is also the current chair of the Undergraduate Association Committee on COVID-19 and serves on the Student Advisory Group for Engineering. She plans a career that will “responsibly use the elegance of engineering to address the immense inequity within our society” and integrate historically ignored perspectives into science policy. At Oxford, Danielle plans to pursue an M.Phil. in Nature, Society, and Environmental Governance.

Samuel E. Patterson

Samuel E. Patterson, Marietta, Georgia, is a senior at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, where he will receive a B.S. in Mathematics, a B.S. in Statistics and a B.A. in Economics. He has done summer research in economics and education at Harvard and in business at the University of Chicago. An accomplished musician, Sam is the Music Director of a community organization and plays upright and electric jazz bass, and volunteered to teach the basics of computer programming to middle school students. His deep work in economics through an equity lens has focused on the importance of transportation infrastructure to improve economic opportunity. Sam intends to do the M.Sc. In Nature, Society and Environmental Governance at Oxford.

Phaidra S. Buchanan

Phaidra S. Buchanan, Atlanta, is a senior at the University of Georgia, where she is pursuing a B.S. in Education. Phaidra helped examine the university’s role in the institution of slavery and studied the lived experiences of enslaved people connected to the university as a member of the History of Slavery at UGA research team. She also volunteers with an organization working to ensure equal access to higher education for students of immigrant families. Phaidra plans a career as a teacher “who fosters criticality, compassion, and joy,” and as an advocate for policies that empower students and communities. At Oxford, Phaidra plans to pursue an M.Sc. in Comparative and International Education.

Jamal T. Burns

Jamal T. Burns, St. Louis, is a senior at Duke University, where he majors in History. A Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellow, his research engages colonial influences on interpretations of the masculinity of Black boys in school settings. Jamal is a leading promoter of a new debate paradigm known as performance debate; he organized a speech and debate tournament that brings high school debaters from across the country to Duke. Jamal also founded and ran a campus organization for first-generation college students. At Oxford, Jamal will pursue an M.Sc. in Social Anthropology and an M.Sc. in Education.

Tyrese D. Bender

Tyrese D. Bender, Fairfax, is in his final year at the U.S. Military Academy where he will get a B.S. in Engineering. He is Deputy Brigade Commander, the second-highest ranking cadet in the West Point chain of command. Tyrese has a 4.0 GPA and has been instrumental in drafting the first-ever Diversity Strategy designed to establish a more inclusive environment at the Academy. He also established a character training protocol for 1300 cadets around issues including race, sexual harassment and assault, mental health, political activism and COVID19. Tyrese is also captain of the Division I track and field team and a champion triple jumper. plans to do an M.Sc. in Sociology and an M.Sc. in Evidence-Based Social Intervention and Policy Evaluation at Oxford.

Nkaziewok N. Nchinda-Pungong

Nkaziewok N. Nchinda-Pungong, Oak Creek, is a senior at Harvard College where he concentrates in Biomedical Engineering with a minor in Sociology. He is working with a team to design a smartphone-based hemoglobin sensor for point-of-care anemia diagnosis, and is Editor-in-Chief of Harvard Brevia, the goal of which is to make scientific research more accessible to students and the general public. In addition to extensive research in microbiology, he has been active in Engineers Without Borders, is co-President of the Harvard Community of Humanists, Atheists and Agnostics, and volunteered extensively in a homeless shelter. The son of Cameroonian immigrants, Nkazi’s focus at Oxford will be to merge his interests in bioengineering and global health in order to make healthcare more scalable and affordable. At Oxford, Nkazi plans to do an M.Sc. by Research in Engineering Science.

Elijah C. DeVaughn

Elijah C. DeVaughn, Compton, is a senior at Harvard College, where he concentrates in History and Literature. A Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellow, his academic interests lie in exploring how rhetoric is used by Black political leaders to combat racial injustice. Elijah has worked on issues of legal representation, clemency, and prison advocacy. Most recently, he worked for the Secretary of Legal Affairs in the Office of Governor Gavin Newsom where he reviewed state prisoners’ applications for commutations and pardons. He is an actor, dancer, and singer and has worked on housing issues as an intern in the office of Senator Kamala Harris. At Oxford, Elijah proposes to pursue an M.Phil. in History.

Evan C. Walker

Evan C. Walker, Rowlett, is in her final year at the U.S. Military Academy where she majors in Operations Research, with focuses in statistics and linear algebra. Her thesis analyzes the demographics of promotion andattrition among U.S. Army Field Grade Officers. She is a Regimental Commander, served as the chief liaison between survivors of sexual harassment or assault and on-campus medical professionals, and is president of an initiative to mentor minority cadets. Evan is also captain of the nationally ranked and gender integrated Army Boxing Team and last year placed second nationally in her weight class. Evan plans to do the M.Sc. in Sociology and the M.Sc. in Statistical Science at Oxford.

Aryemis C. Brown

Aryemis C. Brown, Colorado Springs, is in his final year at the U.S. Air Force Academy where he majors in Legal Studies and Humanities, and minors in Religion Studies and Philosophy. Arye’s research interests are in space and cyberspace law, technology, policy, policy and philosophy. Arye commanded the Air Force Cadet Wing as commander of troops, serving as the highest-ranking cadet at the Academy, responsible for the welfare of 4,400 personnel. His overall order of merit, combining athletic, military and academic factors is 2 of 1059. He was named a Truman Scholar this year from Maryland, where he graduated from high school. Arye will do the M.Sc. in Global Governance and Diplomacy and the Master of Public Policy at Oxford.