Lucy McBath, One of the 'Mothers of the Movement,' Advances in Congressional Run in Georgia

Lucy McBath, mother of 17-year-old Jordan Davis, who was gunned down by a violent white supremacist for playing music too loud in 2012, has advanced to become the Democratic candidate for Georgiaโ€™s 6th Congressional District. Suggested Reading Songs by White Artists You Can Add to Your Black Cookout Playlist NBA’s Mike Beasley’s Alleged Gambling Issues…

Lucy McBath, mother of 17-year-old Jordan Davis, who was gunned down by a violent white supremacist for playing music too loud in 2012, has advanced to become the Democratic candidate for Georgiaโ€™s 6th Congressional District.

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Mother Jones reports that in May, McBath won 36 percent of the vote in a crowded Democratic primary, and on Tuesday defeated Kevin Abel, a small businessman who immigrated from South Africa, in a runoff.

Last week, McBath received the endorsement of Rep. John Lewis, who has represented Georgiaโ€™s neighboring 5th District for the past three decades, his time in Congress as long as McBath was a flight attendant for Delta.

That was before her sonโ€™s tragic death spurned her into another career.

https://twitter.com/LucyWins2018/status/1019586161990348800?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Rep. Karen Handel, a Republican, in what has been a historically Republican and gun-friendly district, will face McBath in Novemberโ€™s general election.

Mother Jones reports that McBath became a staunch gun reform advocate after her son was killed: โ€œtestifying before Congress, sharing her story in twoย documentary films, and eventually stumping for Hillary Clinton during the 2016 presidential campaign.โ€

She was one of the โ€œMothers of the Movementโ€ Clinton brought onstage with her during the Democratic National Convention in 2016. Mother Jones reports that Gun control activists have given generously to McBathโ€™s campaign: The Everytown for Gun Safety Action groupโ€”Moms Demand Action merged with billionaire Michael Bloombergโ€™s Everytown for Gun Safety in 2013โ€”spent more than $500,000 on ads for McBath during the primary.

โ€œIโ€™m not someone whoโ€™s spent my entire life trying to figure out how to be a politician,โ€ McBath says. โ€œBut an ordinary person like myself, coming from very extraordinary circumstances and tragedies in my life, [gives] me a vision thatโ€™s based on my experiences.โ€

Between McBath, Mayor Keisha Bottoms of Atlanta; the black women in South Fulton, Ga., runningโ€”and reformingโ€”that cityโ€™s criminal justice system; and Stacey Abrams, who put her hat in for governor, it looks like Georgiaโ€™s peach is ripe for biting.

And for black women to lead.

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