Monday, September 2, 2024

Dynamic Congressional Leader and Activist Ayanna Pressley brilliantly exposes the Fascist Manifesto known as Project 2025

   DEFEAT FASCISM BEFORE FASCISM DEFEATS YOU

https://panopticonreview.blogspot.com/2024/06/congresswoman-ayanna-pressley-on-openly.html

VIDEO:  

https://youtube.com/shorts/XwfJlT1WYm0

“IS THERE SOMETHING FUNNY?"

"What's Past is Prologue..."

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/01/us/politics/ayanna-pressley-massachusetts.html

Ayanna Pressley Seeks Her Political Moment in a Changing Boston

Ayanna Pressley, a Boston City Council member, will be the first African-American woman to represent Massachusetts in Congress. Credit: Kayana Szymczak for The New York Times


by Katharine Q. Seelye and Astead W. Herndon
September 1, 2018
New York Times

• Updated Sept. 4: Ayanna Pressley beat Michael Capuano in the primary on Tuesday night.

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — It’s not a sight you see every day, certainly not around Boston — a black woman mounting a plausible challenge to a 10-term white congressman from her own party, a politician with vast connections who votes the progressive line and opposes everything Trump.

[Rep. Ayanna Pressley opens ups about living with alopecia and hair loss.]

But here was Ayanna Pressley, a Boston City Council member and rising Democratic star, exhorting volunteers in a Cambridge restaurant with an impassioned performance style she learned as a child at her grandfather’s storefront Baptist church in Chicago.

“This is not just about resisting and affronting Trump,” she declared, garbed in a flowing red jumper. “Because the systemic inequalities and disparities that I’m talking about existed long before that man occupied the White House!”

The crowd went wild.

“Change can’t wait!” she shouted, echoing her campaign slogan, her voice raspy as it took on speed and urgency.

Ms. Pressley is herself an emblem of change that can’t wait — and isn’t waiting. She is part of a rising tide of women, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Cynthia Nixon in New York and Stacey Abrams in Georgia, that is challenging historically white male power structures in politics — not only to advance their policy ideas, but also to reflect the changing diversity of their constituents, who have long lacked one of their own in congressional seats or governor’s offices.

In doing so she is taking on a well-respected Massachusetts Democrat, Representative Michael Capuano, who was expecting to coast once again unchallenged for re-election in the Seventh Congressional District, which includes much of Boston and its suburbs. The primary election on Tuesday is one of the last marquee Democrat vs. Democrat battles of 2018.

Massachusetts is well known for deeply entrenched politics that favor incumbents, from the Kennedy dynasty to long-serving mayors, senators and House members. Mr. Capuano, 66, has widespread establishment backing, including Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh, several labor groups, and prominent black leaders like former Gov. Deval Patrick, Representative John Lewis and Representative Maxine Waters. He also has an army of experienced election workers behind him, and a 13-point lead in a poll published in early August.

[Read a conversation with Michael Capuano.]

But Ms. Pressley, 44, may be the rare Boston insurgent whose ambition is in sync with a national political moment that has favored women and underdogs. Last week she achieved an unusual feat for a challenger: Winning endorsements from the city’s major newspapers, The Boston Globe and The Boston Herald. Her supporters are highly energized, and some polling in other recent races has failed to detect strength for minority female candidates. The congressional district is the only one in Massachusetts with more people of color than people who are white. While Mr. Capuano has his advantages, a Pressley win no longer seems far-fetched.