Ferguson voters make history and increase turnout

cole phelps

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http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2015/04/07/ferguson-voters-head-to-polls/25401037/

Ferguson voters make history and increase turnout



For the first time in Ferguson, Missouri's history, half of the city council will be black. The city's residents are predominantly black, but their council members have been predominantly white.

Residents in Ferguson, Mo. Tuesday elected two black city council members, transforming the political body's racial composition after months of protests over racial profiling and police brutality.

One sitting black member of the council was not up for re-election. When the two new African-American council members take their seats it will be the first time that blacks have controlled half of the council, despite the fact that two-thirds of the city's 21,000 residents are black.

Demonstrations gave way to increased civic activism with 29% of eligible voters casting more than 3,700 ballots. That's more than double the 12% of eligible voters that came out for last April's mayoral election.

Since the shooting death last summer of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager, by a white police officer, activists in the St. Louis suburb have implored people to vote. That message came through Tuesday as voters elected Wesley Bell, who is black, in Ward 3, Ella Jones, who is also black, in Ward 1, and Brian Fletcher, who is white, in Ward 2.

"We need more representation because you have to understand the culture of the people and you need to understand how to interact with people," Jones said.


Wesley Bell Jr., 18, left, casts his vote alongside his father Wesley Bell who is running for Ferguson City Council Ward 3 seat on Tuesday, in Ferguson, Mo. (Photo: AP/Laurie Skrivan, The St. Louis Post-Dispatch,)

A Justice Department report last month confirmed a broad pattern of biased policing in the city that singled out African Americans for excessive arrests and harsh punishment. Mayor James Knowles, who is white, holds the seventh seat on the council. He is not up for re-election.

Eric Fey, St. Louis County director of elections, said he was pleased with the turnout but is cautious about whether future elections will have such results.

"I think it's a shame that it took all the events and attention for people to come out and vote for their city council," Fey said. "Only time will tell if people remain engaged."

Bell, 40, a criminal justice instructor and municipal judge, will represent the the neighborhood where Brown, 18, died. He said he will focus on community policing, changing the city's court system and spurring economic development.

"We need to double down and implement policing where departments are part of the community and not distant from the community," Bell said.

Jones, who was a sales director for Mary Kay for 20 years, said she wants to give residents more opportunities to voice their concerns through town hall meetings and wants to look into ways to create jobs in the city.

Fletcher, 55, a former Mayor of Ferguson and a 30-year-resident of the city, says Ferguson needs stability and "normalcy" after months of protests. "It's been a very unsettling period," he said. "The citizens don't want to be in the headlines everyday. They want to go back to their day to day lives. "

Meanwhile, heavy rain and wind that swept through Ferguson Tuesday made some worry that the weather might deter people from voting. The weather slowed turnout early in the day, but turnout picked up later, Fey said. "Luckily we had no power outages, so the weather was only an irritant rather than a major issue," he said.

Throughout Tuesday, candidates offered residents free rides to the polls and volunteers went door to door to get out the vote.
 

Flash Thunderton

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Kokoro

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This a bittersweet thing really

Sweet: Black people voted and made some changes in the institution, kudos

Bitter: They had the power to do this all along, why are they just now doing it? Will this really change anything? We elected our first black president 7 years ago and still face institutionalized racism today. Its a start though, I guess.
 

WheresWallace

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I hope the folks elected do right by the people. I never believed in Politics (in theory it sounds good but it doesn't seem properly practiced) so Ferguson will serve as a beacon. If things change in Ferguson due to these elections, it may start an influx in black voters for local elections. People say local elections are more important than presidential elections so lets see if this is true.

:salute: Ferguson, and salute all the people who got involved in Ferguson. :salute: @bdizzle.
 

Savior

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A good start but the whole legislature should be 100% black. U think white people are electing black officials in cities that are 70% white? I know cats here hate to vote but exercising that power is effective especially when you're the majority. What motivation did all those white dudes in power have to change the status quo when only 12% of the people (prolly all white) were voting? Im glad Ferguson is stepping up :salute:
 

Raava

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This is why voting is important especially in your local elections where the vote not only counts the most but decisions made directly affect you.

Yea yea yea blah blah blah the system is corrupt anyway, it doesn't matter blah blah. That's exactly what they want you to think. You ask how a predominitly black city could have an all white council? That is why, that mentality. If voting didn't matter like people say, why did they and why are they still fighting so hard to keep the right from us? Voters Rights Act was just gutted recently. Think about it.
 

dtownreppin214

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this is a great start. i can't wait till that pig mayor gets gutted next year too. there are dozens of fergusons throughout this country (particularly in the south) where the majority black population are run by a small group of cacs. i wish every one of those towns was targeted to increase the black vote. use this energy in our community to duplicate what just happened in ferguson, one town at a time.
 
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