Kevin Powell: Ascent of a Political Activist

Two years ago, when community activist and writer Kevin Powell campaigned for the 10th Congressional seat currently held by Ed Towns, he knew he would have to run again. “We always knew it would be at least a two campaign race,” said Powell. “When you are challenging an entrenched incumbent, it often takes two races.”


A lot has happened since then.


Powell has continued his monthly male development meetings, a grassroots attempt to nudge males to do what he has done: “re-think everything I know about manhood.” He was asked to assist several vacationing families in a sustained effort for justice in Antigua and Barbuda. He wrote his 10th book, Open Letters to America. He testified before the United Nations against gender violence. And, as further evidence of his maturation process, there have been no salacious headlines.


So far this year, Powell's campaign has raised more money, from more people, than during his entire 2008 campaign. Most donations are small, coming from 40 states across the nation. More Brooklyn people have donated. Big names, such as Marlon Wayans, have contributed big bucks. Powell's new campaign manager, communications and field directors are operating “scientifically,” down to the smallest election district. The one thing Powell was proudest of in his 2008 campaign, has carried over to this year: no behind the scenes drama.


Kevin Powell is happy, and looks content. Campaigning is an opportunity to do what he does – serve others. His 18 hour days start at 5:30 am with Facebook and Twitter posts. From Boerum Hill to Canarsie, East Williamsburg to East New York, Powell hits the streets, delivering constituent services, such as GED, housing, or criminal justice referrals. “We spend as much time as necessary talking to each voter,” Powell said. “We want to demonstrate while we are campaigning the kind of services we will provide, once we got into Congress.”


Spending a few minutes on www.KevinPowell.net, one can find a listing of all the diverse neighborhoods in the district, as well as ethnic, gender, and income data. There is even a history of Brooklyn. “We want to make this an educational process,” he said. Most important for Powell, the complete Campaign Platform can be found on the site, everything from health care, criminal justice, seniors, and net neutrality to violence prevention, immigration, education, and worker rights.


“Bridge to the Future” is Kevin Powell's campaign theme. At 44-years-old, Powell stands firmly in the post-Civil Rights generation. In 1984, he was introduced to politics through the Jesse Jackson Presidential campaign and the anti-apartheid movement. “During the last 26 years, there has been a perpetual generation divide in the Black community. You see it in electoral politics grassroots activism. You see it in the literary/ journalism world. You see it in the artistic community, in the business world, You see it in church. You see it in our Civil Rights organizations.” said Powell. “I am no longer a person who points fingers at the Civil Rights generation. I do see a resistance to supporting young people.”

Powell explained, “But, I think that younger people – myself and folks in the generation behind me – have got to do what many of us have been doing. Do your own thing. Don't wait for someone to pass you a baton. There is never going to be a baton passed. For me, I started writing professionally when I was 20. People I organized with – Ras Baraka, Sista Soulja – we were in our early 20's. We didn't wait for permission to organize around Howard Beach or Bensonhurst back then. We just did it. We could lament on the generational divide. Or, do what I recommend: identify people in the various generations who are progressive and want practical solutions for our communities, and work together.”


While campaigning on the streets, Powell said, “I barely hear anyone talk about Civil Rights issues. What people say they need are jobs, affordable housing, quality education, recreational/ community centers for young people, safe streets for seniors. They ask, 'Can I hold onto my house and not end up in foreclosure?' It's really basic. How do we deal with stop-and-frisk? In one housing project in ENY, just the other day, several tenants who didn't know each other said the same thing to us: the police in this area are constantly stopping our young men, throwing them on the ground and frisking them. Checking their shoes, their socks, their underwear. A man in his 50's, a grown man, a grandfather, said the police did that to him. People are talking about quality of life issues.”


Defining the generational transition currently underway, Powell declared, “This is a new day, we need new terms. Civil rights is a term that belongs in the 20th century. We are in the 21st century. We need a new terminology, and it is definitely coming.”


His prescription: “We have got to develop our communities in six basic ways: spiritually, politically, culturally, economically, and two areas we don't talk about – physical health and mental wellness. It is about holistic development of our communities.” Powell voiced what many miss, “We got the Civil Rights bill and the Voting Rights Act. On a basic level, we have citizenship. The thing we missed, that Dr. King talked about at the end of his life, is economic justice.”


In a critique of absentee leadership, Powell said, “It is not enough to have Black elected officials if they are not doing their jobs. I am not voting for someone anymore just because they are Black. That is unacceptable. This is what I am hearing throughout the community, from young and older people. Jewish folks in Boerum Hill said this to me. Black and Latino people in East New York said this to me. It is unacceptable to have elected officials who we do not see on a regular basis, or their representatives, who are not accessible, who we feel don't have the volume loud enough on issues of importance to us.”


In response to a question about the replication of poverty every 15 years by young girls being impregnated and abandoned by adults, Powell said “The worst gap that exists in Black America since the 1960's is the class gap.” He recalled his young mother, with a grade school education and his father who was in his 30's when he got her pregnant. “He didn't even show up at the hospital when I was born. There is no record of my father being anywhere around. Powell is my mother's last name. Here I am, left to be raised on welfare, food stamps, government cheese, in tenement dwellings where it was normal to have, not mice, but rats running everywhere. It was normal to have roaches everywhere, even inside the refrigerator, which was often broken so you couldn't close it all the way. A lot of people don't understand that kind of life, and what it does to you.”


Powell has been there. With gratitude, he said, “But for the grace of God and my mother's vision for her child, which is me, and not accepting this is what we are destined to – a life of misery and doom. Unfortunately, what happens to a lot of us, particularly if we have low self-esteem, is we get stuck there.” Powell described an all too common situation in Black and brown communities, “If you are a young woman of color in a world where you are dealing with racism, and sexism, and classism, if you are 14-years-old, you have already been told you are nothing, and the only thing that is valuable about you is from your neck down. Then some man or older boy comes along. Next thing you know you are pregnant, or have an STD or one of the 92% of new cases NYC of Black and Latino women carrying the HIV virus. That is what happens. It becomes what Malcolm X called a vicious cycle not only in Brooklyn, but in Harlem, Oakland, New Orleans, Houston, all over the country. I travel to the Caribbean. It's in Jamaica. It's everywhere.”


According to Powell, “Unfortunately, we in this country confused Civil Rights and integration with progress for the entire community. In the Caribbean and Africa, we confused independence with progress for everybody. That wasn't the case. I don't blame the young women or the young men. Many don't know any better. They are carrying profound self hatred; when you hate yourself as a Black person, you will not only destroy yourself, you move to destroy other people who look like you.”


“The solution is simple, but complex,” Powell said. “We need more men like Kevin Powell, like Quentin Walcott, and Byron Hurt, to speak out loudly against all forms of sexism.” Powell said he used to be one of those men who engage in violence against women; only because of God and counseling, he has evolved. Powell said another part of the solution is “internal development of ourselves.”


Of all the issues Powell would like to address if and when he is elected to Congress, economic development is paramount. He said he went to Head Start pre-school. There was a free breakfast and lunch program at school; he went to a free after school program at the Y. His first summer job was a CETA job. During college, he got help from EOP. His mother got help with housing through voucher programs, like Section 8. “Those were all created by the government to give people a hand – not because we were lazy, shiftless, or intellectually inferior,” said Powell, “but because we were poor.”


Kevin Powell said quality of life issues require “a 21st century approach. The issues are what people say they need – jobs and job training.” If elected, Powell would like to serve on education, health, and economic development committees. He suggests small business incubators. “Most of the U.S. population is under 45 and technologically savvy. We all have a hand held device and email. We have to create some jobs and business opportunities that are about technology and the green economy," Powell said. “I look at all these abandoned buildings, including factories, here in the 10th congressional district. Imagine if some of those were turned into technology help centers. Those are low skill jobs that could be for people in this country, right here in Brooklyn. That is the type of issue I will be fighting for.”

 

This post is edited from an article originally published in Our Time Press July 29, 2010.




Mary Alice Miller's picture
Submitted by Mary Alice Miller on Fri, 07/30/2010 - 8:20am.

Congressman Towns sees Kevin Powell as a serious threat this year.

From the Powell campaign:

"My Congressional opponent clearly does not believe in democracy. He refuses to participate in a single debate with me, in spite of our requests for several.


He and his networks told voters/supporters not to sign our petitions and not to donate to our campaign. They have even gone so far as to tell voters and donors that there will be repercussions if Kevin Powell for Congress 2010 is supported instead of his campaign.


Then a general objection was filed against our 8200-plus petition signatures two weeks ago. Because we clearly have plenty of valid signatures, we passed that test with the Board of Elections.


So now my opponent is taking me to court on MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 2ND, via an obscure legal procedure, in an effort to stall the inevitable: THAT HE HAS TO CAMPAIGN IN 2010 WHETHER HE WANTS TO OR NOT."




Submitted by Anonymous bosch (not verified) on Fri, 07/30/2010 - 9:10am.
your article got me interested enough to look at mr powell's website; while i can agree with many of this positions; he's just too far left for my taste.  let's talk about job creation; it ain't gonna come from mom and pop stores (as if there's a pop anyway); it's gonna come from walmart opening a supercenter which will employ thousands and give bklyn consumers real value for their money.  of course, that's opposed by unions whose members can afford to get in their cars and drive to walmart in green acres or farther out; the poor downtrodden types in teh hood have to shop at the mom and pops where they pay more to get less.; education, put all the money into grades pre-k to 3rd; any kid who can't read well by the end of third grade is doomed, and no amount of remediation is gonna help; socialization, bring back the draft.  generations of young men were taught how to keep themselves clean and have some self respect, i hate to push the failure of civilian society on to the military, but they've got a better model for training than our crappy educational system and/or the streets; focus on one issue, the poor have been around since before jesus walked on earth, nurture the ones that show some promise, and get the others out of their face; health, you could eliminate one problem by having central kitchens, have you seen what the fat asses with the benefit cards walk out of the store with?? chips and grape soda, 10% juice, ramen soups, and other assorted crap to keep them fat and happy and they kids stupid; imagine having a centralized feeding operatioin like a walmart with a huge prepared food section where benefit cards could pay for nutritious prepared meals to be microwaved at home.  give people a fishing line, not a fish.
Mary Alice Miller's picture
Submitted by Mary Alice Miller on Fri, 07/30/2010 - 9:20am.

And recorded it all.

I could not put all we talked about in one article. 

He had some interesting things to say about health and job creation.  I will post what he had to say about those topics and more -- with supporting video.

You might find you agree more than disagree.



Mary Alice Miller's picture
Submitted by Mary Alice Miller on Fri, 07/30/2010 - 10:16pm.

Most Wal-Mart employees are low (minimum) wage workers. If Powell is "too far left" for your taste, should the minimum wage be abolished? Is the appropriate method of job creation to "employ thousands" far right?

Example: 

"Literally, if we took away the minimum wage—if conceivably it was gone—we could potentially virtually wipe out unemployment completely because we would be able to offer jobs at whatever level." —Michele Bachmann, 1/26/05, Jobs, Energy and Community Development Committee, testifying against SF 3, a bill to raise the MN minimum wage and advocating the elimination of the minimum wage altogether.

 

Here is a brief look at Wal-Mart, employer of thousands of low wage workers:

 

New York
2005 - Total # of Wal-Mart Employees in State: 35,671
2005 - Estimated # of Wal-Mart Workers on Medicaid: 4,711
2005 - Estimated # of Wal-Mart Dependents on State Health Programs: 2,875
2005 - 2005 - Estimated Total Cost; Federal & State:$61,497,167
http://www.wakeupwalmart.com/feature/healthcrisis/map.html#NY

Let's not forget, thousands of Wal-Mart employees earn a full-time income so low, they also qualify for foodstamps and housing subsidies.

Take a look at "Hidden Cost of Wal-Mart Jobs: Use of Safety Net Programs by Wal-Mart Workers in California" for example.

http://walmartwatch.com/img/documents/hidden_costs.pdf

Add to this the public subsidies demanded by Wal-Mart just to set up shop. Here is Texas, which gave Wal-Mart millions in public subsidies - land, property tax abatements, free infrastructure like power, phone, water, sewer or road hookups. These give-aways cause huge budget deficits for municipalities, forcing hiring freezes and layoffs.

http://info.tpj.org/watchyourassets/walmart/

What is the real value of Wal-Mart to tax paying consumers?

I do agree with bringing back the draft. Not only does the military teach males responsibility (a basic skill in short supply), but the cost/ sacrifice of war should be spread across the populace in an egalitarian manner.

Regarding food stamps, they are courtesy of this country's farm subsidies, and benefit agri-business. That is why food-like products (soda and chips) are cheaper than vegetables. Yet, all hell broke loose when Gov. Paterson proposed a tax on soda, which is nothing but liquid candy.

 



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