What does the rise of Muriel Bowser to the national stage mean for DC Natives?
from our PACK Express project...

Mayor Muriel Bowser seems to be getting a lot of national attention in the past few months.
She has appeared on MSNBC, CNN and ABC to speak on racial justice and the pandemic. She has been offered a Leadership Award by the National Newspaper Publishers Association. Mayor Bowser even had a speaking role at the 2020 DNC. Often alongside other Black woman mayors like Keisha Lance Bottoms, London Breed, and Lori Lightfoote, Muriel has been cast clearly in the national discussion as a local savior, holding the line against the public health and political threats posed by the Trump Administration and its followers.
Most notably, Mayor Bowser has received high praise for her decision to paint “Black Lives Matter” large enough it could be seen from space on the portion of 16th street running up to White House, renaming it “Black Lives Matter Plaza”. A response, of sorts, to the still ongoing nation-wide protests to end racist policing practices and seek accountability for police who commit murder.

Mayor Bowser’s choice to brand herself as a supporter of racial justice begs the question - What does the rise of Muriel Bowser to the national stage mean for DC Natives?
At this point? Not much at all. As Muriel’s star power has gained, DC Natives, most of whom are Black, are fighting to survive.
Take the city’s response to the Covid-19 crisis as an example. On April 12th, when Mayor Bowser sat on CNN’s Inside Politics and said “While the spotlight of Covid-19 is on it, we need national and local strategies to have more equal medical outcomes for African Americans in our country” she had only just set up the first testing site East of the River - even though testing had been available in richer, whiter parts of the city since March. The United Medical Center testing site, until recently, was only open for four hours a day, on weekdays.
The result? There were clear disparities in who was tested for Covid-19, who received treatment and who ultimately died from it. Black DC residents make up 46 percent of the DC, they make up 74 percent of DC’s Covid-19 deaths.
And Wards 7 and 8? The communities served by the single testing site at UMC? They had the highest rates of Covid-19 deaths in the city. Of the 616 people who have died in the District, 124 died in Ward 8. Compare this with Ward 3, which lost 34 of its residents.
Since the Pandemic started, Mayor Bowser ignored the demands to improve Covid-19 protections for the patient population at St. Elizabeth’s; she has failed to extend unemployment assistance to thousands of DC workers who were not covered by the federal CARES Act (including street vendors, undocumented workers and sex workers) and she has pushed for the reopening of DCPS triggering backlash from students, parents and teachers alike. In almost every way that mattered during this pandemic, Mayor Bowser failed Black DC residents.

We definitely did not fail ourselves. Black communities swiftly and effectively stood up and filled in the gaps that the DC government had left. Organizations like Black Lives Matter DC and their East of The River Mutual Aid set up networks targeted at providing food, medical supplies, school supplies to DC residents who were homebound or who had lost their source of income. Mutual aid networks like this existed in all 8 wards in the city and were community-led and owned. By April 20th, East of the River Mutual Aid had already provided 55,000 hot meals to community members.
This theme - the failure of Muriel Bowser to act effectively in response to the needs of Black Washingtonians and the diligence with which those same Black Washingtonians provided for one another - would become even more clear when The Uprisings began.
Protests seeking accountability for the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Tony McDade began in DC within a day of the death of Mr. Floyd. From Day 1, the response from law enforcement was one of aggression. Reports of the use of rubber bullets, tear gas and preemptive arrests came quickly from the frontlines and have continued over the last 4 months. And, while Mayor Bowser may attribute much of that behavior to federal officials it was visibly the DC Police who trapped over a hundred peaceful protesters for 10 hours on a block on Swann St. NW after tear gassing them in clear violation of dc, federal and international law.
This made her comments at the 2020 DNC even more confusing for activists. Sitting with BLM Plaza behind her, Mayor Bowser criticized the Trump administration saying ““He [Trump] sent troops and camouflage into our streets. He sent tear gas into the air, and federal helicopters, too..I knew if he did this to D.C., he would do it to your city or your town. And that’s when I said, ‘Enough.'”
But what was she saying enough to? Her own actions? Muriel Bowser had used tear gas, rubber bullets and helicopters. Muriel Bowser had set a curfew that justified arresting hundreds. Muriel Bowser flooded the streets with police and set up roadblocks that some nights could be found as far north as Columbia Heights. Those were decisions she and her administration made and continue to make, independent from the White House.
Undeterred by the violence of the police, groups like Freedom Fighters DC, Concerned Citizens, Frontline Women established themselves as organizers and defenders of protesters - providing supplies, medics and safe spaces. Many of these groups were built by DC natives with DC natives in mind and have advanced a narrative of police abolition and reform that stems directly from DC’s unique situation of being policed not just on a local but also federal level. Protest groups and traditional advocates have created an organizing framework for the defunding and ultimate abolition of the MPD.They organized over 500 people to sign up to testify at DC police budget hearings, and protests city-wide that have continued every day for the last 112 days. Unlike Muriel, DC natives said “enough” and actually meant it.
What is abundantly clear from the last 7 months, is that Muriel Bowser’s national success as a politician - her awards, her speaking engagements, everything - has come directly from an unabashed lie - that Black DC Matters to her. If Black DC mattered, there would have been more than one testing site East of the River. But there wasn't. If Black DC had mattered, Swann St. wouldn't have happened. But it did. Instead of actually choosing to do the work of protecting Black communities in DC, Mayor Bowser chose the national spotlight. Leaving us to fight her and the federal government at the same time. And, that's not something people are likely to forget come the next mayoral election.








