Though Active Voters, Black Women Continue to Face Political Exclusion


Theodore Johnson for MSNBC - Black women are one of the most active political constituencies in the nation, yet they are severely underrepresented in federal, state, and local  government, according to a new study released this week. The Higher Heights Leadership Fund and the Rutgers University Center for American Women and Politics, in collaboration with the Center for American Progress, has released these findings in a report entitled the “Status of Black Women in American Politics,” which highlights the extent to which black women’s voices are not being adequately heard, or their concerns addressed.

Through the examination of academic research and statistics on the black female electorate, the report makes it clear that this demographic is increasingly vital to the political process. Black women had a higher voter turnout rate than any other race or  gender subgroup in the 2008 and 2012 general elections. Within the black community, women make up over 52% of the population, represent nearly 60% of the electorate, and turn out to vote at a rate nearly 10% higher than men.



There are tangible results of this influence: it is widely recognized that black women were pivotal in electing Terry McCauliffe as governor of Virginia and reelecting Senators Brown and Kaine in Ohio and Virginia, respectively.

In addition to voting behavior, black women have made significant strides in income and education over the last couple of decades, showing their importance to the strength of the economy. They outpace their male counterparts in earning high school and college degrees, and the report cites that black women are the primary breadwinners in black American households, which hold over one trillion dollar in annual spending power.

These things taken together mean that the heart of black American politics and economics is increasingly female – and that these women are centrally important to Democrats. But the report also shows that despite this truism, black women face barriers to representation in elected office.

Photo: J.D. Pooley/Getty Images

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