Obama Gives First Black Senator Congressional Gold

From the Washington Post: Suggested Reading Here Is Everything You Need To Know About Bloody Sunday The Internet is Losing Its Mind Over Oprah’s Crop Top and Fly Looks ‘Mean Ushers, Peppermints’ and 15 Other Blackity-Black Church Rules You Need to Know Video will return here when scrolled back into view HBCU Endowments vs. Harvard’s…

From the Washington Post:

Video will return here when scrolled back into view
Beyonce’s Cowboy Carter Tour Kicked Off With This Viral Moment

President Obama honored Edward Brooke, the first African American to be elected to the Senate by popular vote, praising him Wednesday as a political pioneer who broke racial barriers and bridged divides to move “the arc of history.” Speaking in the Capitol Rotunda at a ceremony where Brooke, 90, was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal, the body’s highest honor, Obama said that Brooke ignored the “naysayers” and rejected conventional wisdom to carve out a history-making political career. Brooke grew up in a segregated world, but came to represent a brand of politics that crossed racial lines. A Washington, D.C. native, Brooke served in the segregated Army and became a lawyer. When the big firms ignored his applications, he set up his own practice. He then became the first African American in Massachusetts history to win statewide elective office, first as attorney general and later as a U.S. senator. He served in the Senate from 1967 to 1979. Obama noted that when Brooke decided to run for office he bucked the odds. He was an African American, a Protestant and a Republican in as state that was mostly white, Catholic and Democratic. But Brooke believed that voters would assess him based on his ideas and character — faith that was ultimately rewarded, Obama noted. “Ed was unfazed,” he said.

Straight From The Root

Sign up for our free daily newsletter.