The New Tri-State Defender - June 30-July 6, 2022

Page 1

Get TSD news, online anytime at TSDMemphis.com

June 30 - July 6, 2022

VOL. 71, No. 26

www.tsdmemphis.com

$1.00

Supreme Court’s landmark abortion ruling stirs local opposition and support by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

Robertson took the helm in 2018 after the chamber’s then-president and CEO Phil Trena-

The U.S. Supreme Court’s reversal of the court’s 49-year-old landmark Roe vs. Wade decision, which protected a woman’s right to an abortion, ignited a fire of outraged protests across the country by abortion supporters. The high court’s reversal was announced June 24. In Memphis, for example, pink “Hands Off My Body” t-shirts of Memphis protesters lined intersections along Poplar Avenue. The court’s 6-3 opinion also set in motion “trigger laws” in several states, including Tennessee. Trigger laws are abortion restriction laws passed by state legislatures, which would become effective if Roe were reversed. Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed the state’s trigger law in 2019. The measure criminalizes “performing or attempting to perform an abortion,” as early as six weeks, except when pregnancy jeopardizes the mother’s life. The U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals removed the injunction on the trigger law on Tuesday (June 28). After criminalization of abortion providers became law, Planned Parenthood of Tennessee and North Mississippi (PPTNM) announced that abortion services would halt immediately. “The six-week abortion ban is enacted when an embryo’s cardiac activity is detected on ultrasound,” PPTNM CEO Ashley Coffield explained. “Planned Parenthood of Tennessee and North Mississippi has made the very difficult decision to suspend all abortion services.” Coffield said PPRNM, instead, is “navigating care for patients outside of Tennessee and providing logistical for patients who need abortion services.” Social justice leaders and community activists blasted the high court’s action as “disproportionately hurting the least among us.” For example, Memphis Branch NAACP Executive Director Vickie Terry, said, “We already knew what was coming in early May when that Supreme Court (abortion-ban draft opinion) was leaked.” A statement from the National NAACP said: “We feel the fear. We’ve been here before, and there’s no way we’re ever going back. The fight is on.” Terry also struck a defiant note Tuesday. “This is not the time for silence. The NAACP has always been at the forefront in the fight against social injustice. Black and poor women are going to be disproportionately affected. “The state can force women to carry a pregnancy to term, despite any physical, mental, or financial hardship. They want a fight. Well, they’ve got one.” Although Democrats lay the reversal at the feet of Republicans, not all Republicans feel overturning the law was good. “I don’t think reversing Roe v. Wade was right, because I don’t think the government should make decisions about a woman’s body,” said community activist and long-

SEE CHAMBER ON PAGE 2

SEE ABORTION ON PAGE 2

Regarding the ramifications of the recent Supreme Court decision re: Roe v. Wade, incumbent D.A. Amy Weirich said, “We follow the law in the district attorney’s office. ... And when the dust settles and we see where we are, we will handle this issue as we do everything else: with the facts, with the evidence, with the law, and always, always, always coupled with justice and coupled with mercy.” (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises/The New Tri-State Defender)

DA candidates take stands with their dueling positions in ‘spirited’ debate by Karanja A. Ajanaku kajanaku@tsdmemphis.com

With Election Day on Aug. 4 and early voting set to begin on July 15, the candidates for Shelby County District Attorney General each think the other is a seriously bad choice for the job. Incumbent Amy Weirich, the GOP standard-bearer, and attorney Steve Mulroy, who emerged as the Democratic Primary winner, squared off on Monday night during the candidate forum that the Black Clergy Collaborative of Memphis hosted at Saint Andrew A.M.E. Church at 867 S.

Parkway East. What ensued was a high-stakes, giveand-take exchange that reflected stark differences in positions and disagreement about facts and truth. “It was spirited. It definitely was spirited,” said Mulroy. “It probably was one of the most spirited debates we’ve had in Shelby County in a while. But I think it’s because there are very, very stark differences between the two candidates and voters are being given a real choice.” Weirich said it’s important for voters “to understand that our two philosophies about our office and the criminal justice system

are diametrically opposed. He thinks the system is too tough in some regards and I know it is not tough enough.” Mulroy used his opening statement to say he was tired of Shelby County’s district attorney’s office “being the worst” in multiple ways, naming prosecutorial misconduct, not sharing required evidence, making prejudicial statements to a jury and racially disproportionate outcomes. “But most of all, we’re worst when it comes to crime,” said Mulroy. “We can do better. We must do better. … vote for

SEE DA ON PAGE 3

Beverly Robertson chooses ‘now’ to move on from Greater Memphis Chamber by Erica R. Williams

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

Beverly Robertson, president and chief executive officer of the Greater Memphis Chamber, knows “when it’s time to say when.” And for the first Black female president of the 184-year-old organization, that time is now. Robertson recently announced she would be stepping down from her role as head of the chamber in December to focus on TRUST Marketing, the communications firm she founded with her husband, Howard Robertson. “I knew that this wouldn’t be a National Civil Rights Museum tenure,” said Robertson, who previously served as the president of the National Civil Rights Museum for 17 years.

Beverly Robertson is moving on from the Greater Memphis Chamber, where she has served as president and chief executive officer since 2018. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises/The New Tri-State Defender) “But I wanted to get in and get some dynamic and transformative things done at the chamber and put a lot of things in place. I believe that those things are now in place.”

Get TSD News, announcements and special promotions in your email! visit TSDMemphis.com to sign up, or scan the code at right!


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.