NJG-Volume-123_No-45_Nov_9_2023

Page 1

NEWJOURNAL & GUIDE Serving Norfolk, Portsmouth, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Suffolk & The Peninsula

Vol. 123, No. 45 | $1.50

November 9, 2023 - November 15, 2023

Publishing since 1900 ... that no good cause shall lack a champion and evil shall not thrive unopposed.

www.thenewjournalandguide.com

WHO’S POLLING BLACK AMERICAN VOTERS?

By Rosaland Tyler

...only about 20 percent of those who actually participated in the recent NYT poll were non-white.

Associate Editor New Journal and Guide

In 2024, Black voters must turn out at the polls in huge numbers because it’s unknown how many pollsters actually ask Black voters, ‘What do you think about President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump?’ It’s impossible to tell the total number of Blacks who weighed-in on the recent New York Times and Siena Poll, which shows former President Donald Trump is leading President Joe Biden in five of six swing states – Nevada, Georgia, Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin – all of which Biden won in 2020. That poll is showing up on news accounts with

President Joe Biden

Ex Pres. Donald Trump

headiness practically giving Donald Trump a clear way to the 2024 election. Yet, if you scroll through the recent Nov. 5, 2023 poll, a linear graph shows only about 20 percent of those who actually participated in the recent poll were non-white. Most voters were ages 45 to 64. About 20 percent of the

respondents were college grads. Based on this new and possibly questionable poll, some prominent newscasters continue to say almost half of all Democrats would prefer Biden hang up his Air Force One bomber jacket after one term. However, Biden’s support

still remains strong among Black voters, who cast 89 percent of their total votes for Biden in 2020. Has that fact evaporated into thin air? Some polls say Biden’s favorability ratings among Black voters shifted from 84 percent right after he took office in 2021 to 74 percent at the end of March 2023, according to YouGov/Economist polling, but few polls substantiate these claims. ...see Polls, page 2A Photo: Randy Singleton

Popular Maryland Governor Stumps In Va. Beach State Senator L. Louise Lucas,TKO! 18th District, returns to the Virginia

Senate as a Senior Leader poised to lead the Senate Appropriation committee, another first in her lengthy political career. Shown with daughter Lisa Burke,Vice Mayor, City of Portsmouth.

DEMS CLAIM VA. STATE HOUSE!

By Leonard E. Colvin

Chief Reporter New Journal and Guide

Photo: Courtesy

VIRGINIA BEACH Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (back row center) campaigned during the closing days before Tuesday, November 7 elections with Democratic candidates in Hampton Roads, the Richmond area, and Northern Virginia in one of the most closely watched statewide races in the nation. In Hampton Roads, he spoke in Virginia Beach before a big crowd, hosted by State Senate candidate Aaron Rouse and joined by Congresspersons Bobby Scott and Jennifer McClellan, other State House and Senate hopefuls, Hampton Roads mayors, and local city council members. ...see page 6A

Virginia Democrats won the 2023 Legislative General Election on November 7 reclaiming both the State House and keeping the Senate In unofficial results just before 7 a.m. Wednesday morning, Democrats had majorities of 21-19 in the Senate and 51-49 in the House of Delegates. All 140 legislative seats were on the ballot. Pivotal to

the House flip was won by Michael Feggans over incumbent Karen Greenhalgh in Virginia Beach. The thin majorities will allow Democrats to keep Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin in check on issues such as abortion which may have energized Independent and Democratic voters, fearing Republicans would restrict the time a woman could undergo the procedure, from the state’s current 22 weeks. ...see Dems, page 6A

DR. LA FRANCIS RODGERS-ROSE:

A THANKFUL HEART FOR 21 YEARS By Leonard E. Colvin

Having a heart transplant was risky, but there was a chance a suitable donor could come forth before her time and heart ran out.

Chief Reporter New Journal and Guide Twenty-one years ago, Dr. La Francis RodgersRose, the founder and leader of the International Black Women’s Congress (IBWC), was at the forefront of advocating and supporting Black women and their families on issues related to physical and mental wellness. The Virginia native was based in Newark, New Jersey at the time, an urban center where social, economic, and health disparities were evident. Then, as now, heart disease, various cancers, diabetes, substance abuse, and other maladies were impacting Blacks disproportionately. Sexually Transmitted

Dr. La Francis Rodgers-Rose Diseases (STDs) were a common and historic scourge in the Black communities. But HIV, which causes AIDS, made it deadlier and people were dying left and right, she said. “I was busy with the IBWC, my activism, and realizing that I was making a difference in lives and the life of my people,” she recalled.

She and her husband had nurtured two adult offspring who were sailing along in the early stages of their careers. In 2002, Rodgers-Rose was in her mid-60s, was health-conscious, and avoided drinking, smoking, certain foods, and other factors that led to any impairment of her age. But one day after flying back to her New Jersey home from Jamaica, Rodgers-Rose had to call her sister Cynthia Rodgers who lived in Chesapeake. She recalled that while walking through the airport to her car, she could hardly

breathe. “I told her she needed to take a rest,” said Cynthia Photo: Courtesy Rodgers, who directs the Delegate Aaron Rouse moves from the House to the programs for the IBWC. Senate as the winner in the new Senate 22nd District, “I told her that she was defeating Republican Kevin Adams, 56% - 44%. working way too hard and needed to relax more.” Rodgers-Rose thought she had a bad case of asthma. “My doctor looked me over and discovered I had issues with my heart ... serious ones,” she recalled. “That was a Friday. The doctor told me if I made it to Monday, I should see a heart specialist. I did and he told me my heart was working at eight percent capacity.” ...see Thanks, page 8A

National Miss Juneteenth 2024 Is Crowned NEW ORLEANS – DeMia (Mia) Taylor of Alabama was crowned National Miss Juneteenth 2024 on October 21. Over the next year, she will serve as the see page 7A Youth Ambassador for Juneteenth nationwide and worldwide. ......see

Photo: Courtesy

Michael B. Feggans will enter the Virginia House of Delegates representing the 97th District after defeating Republican Karen Greenhalgh, 54% to 46%.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
NJG-Volume-123_No-45_Nov_9_2023 by NJG WebTech - Issuu