| 2003 Archive | |||
CBCF-ALC Town Hall Meeting Breaks New Ground in the Campaign to Boost Voter Registration and Turnout for the 2004 Election
Viewers from each site asked the expert panelists questions via E-mail. This new cyber-audience augmented the ALC audience of more than 500 people at the new Washington Convention Center. Embracing new communication technologies while fully utilizing older media vehicles is absolutely essential to reaching our key stakeholders, which include the largest group of inactive African-American voters, young people between the ages of 18 and 25," said CBCF President Weldon J. Rougeau. "Our Webcast of today's Town Hall Meeting builds on the CBCF's unique capacity to convene the brightest African-American thinkers and doers, and engage them in substantive dialogue about the issues most important to the survival and advancement of our people." Moderated by Emmy-award-winning broadcast journalist Ed Gordon,
the meeting challenged the panel of 11 nationally renowned public
policy-makers, political strategists, educators and civil rights
activists to go beyond describing the problems of voter apathy
and disenfranchisement, and begin developing and implementing
effective ways to motivate, activate and protect the African-American
electorate. "The vote is as crucial to us today as it was when Dr.
King and I marched on Washington 40 years ago," said Town
Hall panelist Dr. Dorothy Height, President of the National Council
of Negro Women. "We have to get back to the basics and do
things the way we used to do when we were fighting for the right
to vote in the 1960s. If we do this, we will fulfill Dr. King's
dream." Take time to understand the reasons why African Americans are
not voting and develop specific communication initiatives to address
the reasons. "This Town Hall Meeting is designed to be a catalyst for the important voter education work that lies ahead," said Rep. William J. Jefferson (D-LA), Chairman of the CBCF . "The panelists provided invaluable new insights into African-American disenfranchisement and gave us a tangible course of action that can turn voter apathy into voter activism," he concluded. The Town Hall participants were Dorothy Height, president of the National Council of Negro Women; Cory Booker of Booker & Rabinowitz Attorneys at Law; Kimberle Crenshaw, Professor at Law, UCLA Law School; Portia Pedro, Organizing Director, U.S. Student Association; Mayor Shirley Franklin of Atlanta; Wade Henderson, Executive Director of Leadership Conference on Civil Rights; Bev Smith, Urban Radio Network; Donna Brazile, Brazile & Associates; Ronald Walters, Dept. of Government and Politics, University of Maryland; Regina Thomas, Secretary of State, Trenton, N.J.; Omar Wasow, Executive Director, Blackplanet.com; and the Rev. Jesse Jackson. DIRECT QUOTES FROM PARTICIPANTS:
# # # The Annual Legislative Conference is the premier fund-raising
event for the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, Inc. (CBCF),
which supports the creation and administration of innovative programs
addressing issues critical to the well-being and advancement of
African Americans and the African Diaspora. CBCF, which is located
in Washington, D.C., was established in 1976 as a nonpartisan,
nonprofit, public policy, research and educational institute.
The CBCF educates future leaders and promotes collaboration among
community and business leaders and organized labor to effect positive
and sustainable change in the African-American community. Learn
more about the work of CBCF by visiting the official Web site
at www.cbcfinc.org.
The CBCF serves as a nonpartisan, policy-oriented catalyst to educate future leaders and promote collaboration among community and business leaders, minority-focused organizational leaders, and organized labor to effect positive and substantive change in the African American community.
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Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, Inc. 1720 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, DC 20036 (202) 263-2800 |