Dawn Blagrove - "This Woman's Work"
Host Erika Washington welcomes back Dawn Blaigrove, executive director of Emancipate NC, to process the Supreme Court decision weakening Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and what it means for Black political power. They argue that chasing temporary wins and constant crisis response has prevented long-term strategy, succession planning, and “inoculation” against policymakers’ whims. Dawn urges building bottom-up power by taking over local governments, school boards, and municipal systems, creating cooperative, self-sustaining community pillars (education, safety, health, food, shelter, security) that can function with, without, and against government. They discuss collective economic responsibility, urging Black people with means to materially support others to create breathing room for long-term decisions, reject leader-centered celebrity politics, fund Black-led organizing, and still vote while holding elected officials accountable and pushing reforms, including Supreme Court reform.
- (00:00) - Introduction
- (01:54) - How We Keep Ending Up Back Here
- (03:04) - Building Local Power & Inoculating from Policymakers
- (06:00) - Sovereign Spaces & Co-ops
- (09:04) - Ruby Duncan, Welfare Rights & The Cycle of Fighting
- (11:27) - Long-Term Planning vs. Survival Mode
- (18:20) - Economic Solidarity: Each One Help Three
- (24:25) - Funding Our Own Liberation
- (42:11) - Vested Interests in Black Pain
- (53:46) - The Voting Rights Act & Supreme Court Decision
- (01:00:26) - What This Means for the 2026 Midterms
- (01:07:22) - Voting Is a Process, Not Just an Act
- (01:12:36) - Radical Imagination & Strategic Planning
Creators and Guests
