Latest News
View All →Black Voters, We Have to Show Up: The 2026 Baltimore Election Is Too Important to Sit Out
Black People, We Have to Show Up (LOCHEARN – May 30, 2026) – Dear Family, Do you remember where you were on Tuesday, November 4, 2008? I do. That morning, around 7 a.m., I walked around the corner to my polling place and saw something I had never seen before. The line was out the door. For a little perspective, I live in Sandtown. Zip code 21217. A community that has endured concentrated poverty, undereducation, addiction, violence, and mass incarceration. Baltimoreans make up 40% of the state’s prison population, while the city represents only 9% of the state’s population. Yet on that morning, the people showed up. DO YOU HEAR ME? Simply unforgettable. It reminded me of another historic moment. April 27, 1994. The first free election in democratic South Africa. Lines stretching for miles. Black South Africans — many voting for the very first time in their lives — standing for hours under the sun because they understood what was at stake. That election ended with Nelson Mandela taking his rightful place in history as the first democratically elected president of South Africa. Two nations. Two historic lines. One undeniable truth: When Black people show up, history changes. My pundit buddy over in DC later called the 2008 election an anomaly. I still struggle to see it that way. What I saw was Black people participating in democracy because they believed their vote mattered. Whatever the explanation, that day ended with the election of President Barack Obama — and echoed the same spirit that swept Mandela into power fourteen years earlier. My point is simple: Black people showed up. A lot has changed since 2008. Yet some things remain stubbornly the same — both in the United States and in South Africa. We still wrestle with poverty. We still struggle against educational inequities. We still face mass incarceration and economic disparities. Too often, progress for Black people feels like one step forward and two steps back on both sides of the Atlantic. And right now, it is war. I need you to understand that. Not metaphorically. Not as a figure of speech. It is war against Black political power in this country. The Voting Rights Act — paid for with the literal blood of civil rights marchers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge — is being gutted by the Supreme Court in real time. Conservative justices are systematically dismantling every legal protection our ancestors bled and died to secure. And it’s not just in the courts. Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett — one of the boldest Black voices in Washington — just got bumped in Texas. Thank God Jim Clyburn survived in South Carolina. But make no mistake: they are coming for our seats. They are coming for our districts. They are coming for our power. And they are organized, funded, and focused. Black people cannot afford to be entitled. We cannot afford to be privileged about this. We cannot afford to assume our seats are safe, our votes don’t matter, or…
Serial entrepreneur, Kwe Parker has been a successful entrepreneur for years. Hear his story. How it all got started. Growing…
Kweisi’s still got it. If you’re going after the king, bring your lunchbox! Watch full video on YouTube
Esposito Declines Fox45 Participation, Centers Baltimore City Storytellers and Student Voices
(BALTIMORE – May 19, 2026) – Ashley “Ash” Esposito, candidate for re-election to the Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners, announced today that she will…
Politics
More News
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.
Featured Videos
Chezia has worked on all three levels of government, from Baltimore City Hall to the White House. Watch full video on YouTube
(BALTIMORE – May 17, 2026) – One year ago, I was preparing to walk across the stage at Morgan State University for a Master’s degree…
BLACK WALL STREET AWARDS | WOODLAWN | JUNE 4, 2026 For 40+ years, Randy Dennis showed up — no ego, no drama, just music, community,…
(BALTIMORE – April 29, 2026) – When Bishop John Richard Bryant shows up for your ribbon-cutting, you know you have…
(BALTIMORE – April 26, 2026) — There is an energy swirling in Baltimore right now. A momentum is in motion. And…
You may have missed
(WOODLAWN – May 21, 2026) — Some people stumble into their life’s calling. Frances Parks…
BMORENews.com and the Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards will recognize longtime James Mosher Baseball…
(BALTIMORE – May 19, 2026) – My take on the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent Voting…
(BALTIMORE – May 17, 2026) – For years, residents of Edmondson Village have been told…
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.
Trending News
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest Baltimore news and updates directly to your inbox.
Advertisement
(BALTIMORE – April 30, 2026) — What started five years ago as a cooking competition has evolved into something far more consequential for Baltimore’s next generation of culinary and hospitality professionals.…
Watkins is a longtime community servant. Watch full video on YouTube
Wade was recognized for her work in the community. Watch full video on YouTube
Congressman Mfume talks about Turner Station’s living legacy. Watch full video on YouTube
Discover how AI’s inherent racism stems from outdated technology like the Shirley Card. We explore the historical bias in facial … Watch full video on YouTube
Congressman Mfume found it not robbery to attend the Black Wall Street SPARROWS POINT. We asked him to present an award … Watch full video on YouTube
(BALTIMORE – May 8, 2026) – Margaret “Betty” Watkins has been doing hair in Turner Station for 53 years. Tomorrow, she gets her flowers. Watkins is among the honorees at Black Wall Street SPARROWS POINT, the latest stop in the Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards series, founded by Doni Glover. The event celebrates Black entrepreneurship, legacy, and economic empowerment rooted in community. Betty’s story is Turner Station through and through. A native of the historic waterfront community, she graduated from Sollers Point Junior/Senior High School in 1964 before studying at Earn Power Business School, where she trained as an…
Tonight on the Indigenous Series: Never Forget. From oral traditions and ancestral memory to contested histories and modern … Watch full video on YouTube
BALTIMORE — Join us on Tuesday, May 13, from 10 a.m. to 12 noon at Fulton Bank’s Federal Hill Financial Center for Cupcakes & Conversations, a special Small Business Month event designed to bring Baltimore’s business community together. Enjoy a morning of connection, insights, and sweet treats while learning more about Fulton Bank’s products and services designed to support and grow your business. Whether you’re an entrepreneur, small business owner, or aspiring founder, this event offers a welcoming space to network, exchange ideas, and explore resources to help take your business to the next level.
Father of truck driver hit by plane hold press conference at Office of J. Wyndal Gordon, Esq. Gordon has handled several high … Watch full video on YouTube
(BALTIMORE – May 4, 2026) — Our community has been propagandized into blurring the line between political and personal engagement. Politics is about power—power to impose an agenda regarding the distribution of resources and the rules that govern society. Too often, our community engages in politics as if it were a collection of social clubs. Political fundraisers and banquets can feel more like prom or homecoming than sites of serious power-building. There is nothing wrong with having events that feel good, but that environment can obscure the fundamental reality: politics is about power, not personalities. There are three questions I…
Recommended
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.














































































































