New York Wants to Elect The First Openly Gay Members of Congress~ Richie Torres is One of Them
Look at that smile and tell me what is not real about it. The more you get to know the man the more you will like him. I can say that because I have not personally met him but I like the way he is. If you want to see what grass roots are, this man is the bean tree growing from it. Adam
Richie Torres (wikepedia) |
Opinion by
Ritchie Torres is the Democratic candidate for New York’s 15th Congressional District.
Whenever I’m about to enter a new setting — like the New York City Council in 2014 or Congress in 2021 —
I never have the luxury of taking acceptance for granted. My life experience has taught me this. I often wonder: Will I be accepted for who I am? A gay man, an Afro-Latino, a millennial sometimes surrounded by older colleagues with more experience?
I’m confident that I will be accepted, indeed embraced, when it comes to the House Democratic Conference, where more than 60 percent of members are women, people of color and LGBTQ, a level of diversity without precedent in the history of American politics.
But there is a caveat: The question of who I am racially will likely run into the binary buzzsaw of caucus politics. There is an antiquated rule that prohibits members of Congress from joining both the Congressional Black Caucus and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. The wall of separation between the CBC and CHC ignores the realities of racial identity, which feels especially tone-deaf in this present moment.
You have to pick a side, so to speak. You can be either black or Latino but never both. In real life, however, I am both. We Afro-Latinos refuse to be divided against ourselves by an arbitrary rule that bears no relation to how we experience identity in the real world.
You have to pick a side, so to speak. You can be either black or Latino but never both. In real life, however, I am both. We Afro-Latinos refuse to be divided against ourselves by an arbitrary rule that bears no relation to how we experience identity in the real world.
Although an anachronism in our own time, the rule might have had its place at one point in history. Founded about a half-century ago, both caucuses were intent on establishing their political power and creating space for the issues affecting their communities.
When President Richard M. Nixon refused to meet with the Congressional Black Caucus, the CBC famously boycotted his 1971 State of the Union address, citing his “consistent refusal to hear the pleas and concerns of black Americans.” The action pressured Nixon to appoint a special committee to look into their list of recommendations.
After the 1976 elections, the Congressional Hispanic Caucus pressured President Jimmy Carter to appoint more Latinos after denouncing the lack of representation in his administration.
There have been many other important achievements, but it’s clear these caucuses have to bring their norms and rules into the 21st century to expand their influence and mission. The need for change is personal and political, as well as reflective of an evolution in how we conceptualize race in the United States. The very idea of intersectionality tells us to embrace the places at which identities intersect, rather than create false choices between them. I am both black and Latino — there’s no need to artificially barricade one from the other.
Racial identity is chosen and given. It is as much a product of the world’s perception of you as it is of your own conception of yourself.
When the world looks at me, it sees a black man, and that blackness — both real and perceived — has tangible consequences. I’m among the hundreds of thousands who were humiliated at the hands of the New York City Police Department during the height of stop and frisk, an aggressive police tactic that targeted mostly black men and was ruled unconstitutional as applied in the city. As a black man within the Latino community, I have felt the pain of colorism, including at the hands of my own family. My Afro-Latino identity enables me to see racism inter sectionally, within multiple cultures and across multiple spheres, such as the criminal justice system, education and immigration, to name but a few.
Since the “either-or” rule is a policy of the Congressional Black Caucus, I have a personal plea to make to my future colleagues there: Expecting Afro-Latinos like myself to be politically alienated from our own blackness — at a time when Black Lives Matter has become the rallying cry of a racially awakened nation— is the cruelest of ironies.
When the CBC has internal debates about issues affecting black people — as it surely will in 2021 when I hope to enter Congress — I, as a black man, have a right to have a seat at that table. Denying me that would do great harm not only to me but to the hundreds of thousands of African Americans and Afro-Latinos I will likely represent in the South Bronx.
This is something I cannot accept. I am an agitator when I need to be, and agitate I will until this exclusionary rule is gone for good.
{{ People.com}}
Mondaire Jones (Right) and New York City Councilman Ritchie Torres (left) |
{{ People.com}}
Two candidates in New York are on their way to becoming the first openly gay Black members of Congress.
The state held its Democratic primaries on Tuesday, with final results expected to be counted by June 30 once all the absentee ballots are in.
However, early counts show that lawyer Mondaire Jones and New York City Councilman Ritchie Torres are poised to win their primaries, paving the way for their victories in the November general election. (Both of their districts reliably vote Democrat.)
According to TIME, should both candidates win in November, Jones and Torres would be the first openly gay Black members of Congress. Torres would also become the first openly gay Afro-Latino congressman.
“Growing up poor, Black and gay, I would never have imagined that someone like me could run for Congress, let alone be a leading contender for the Democratic nomination,” Jones, who is running in New York’s 17th Congressional District in the lower Hudson Valley, told TIME. “I’m really grateful for this opportunity to inspire people and to change history.”
Jones previously worked in the Department of Justice during President Barack Obama's administration and recently served as an attorney in the Westchester County Law Department.
The 33-year-old has won the backing of prominent progressive figures such as Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
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As of 2 p.m. on Wednesday, Jones had around 44.8 percent of the vote, according to The New York Times.
"The historic nature of this moment is not lost of me,” he told TIME. “It’s not just about representation. It’s about what your lived experience brings to policy discussions.”
“Growing up, had I been able to see someone quite like myself in Congress, it would have been direct evidence of the fact that things really do get better,” he added. “This has been a long time coming — approximately 244 years.”
Torres is running to represent New York’s 15th Congressional District in the Bronx.
The 32-year-old was first elected to the N.Y.C. council back in 2013 at 25. He became the youngest member of the council and the first openly gay elected official in the Bronx.
“I’m not prepared to declare victory until every vote is counted, but even if I win the election, it is governing that matters and delivering results for the everyday people of the Bronx,” Torres said in a statement to TIME. “It would be the honor of my life to represent this borough. It’s my home.”
“I would not be here today if it were not for my mother,” he continued. “The South Bronx is full of mothers like mine who have have suffered, struggled and sacrificed so we can have a better life. The opportunity to represent the essential workers of this borough and the powerful mothers of the Bronx, would be the culmination of a dream.”
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