A coalition of community organizations plans to get 1,000 people involved to help boost voter engagement efforts among Black men this November.
100 Black Men of Cleveland, Prince Hall Masons, and local Divine Nine fraternity chapters partnered with several other community organizations for a nonpartisan event aimed at boosting voter registration and turnout among Black men in Northeast Ohio.
Pastor C. Jay Matthews with United Pastors was one of the event’s speakers.
“It’s wrong to steal the ballot from Black men. It’s wrong to lie to black men who have been lied to this country ever since we have been here, it is wrong to continue to incarcerate Black men at a rate faster than anyone in the world,” Matthews said.
100 Black Men turned out to be 300 inside the Central neighborhood meeting space. The goal: get Black men to the polls. Cleveland City Council President Blaine Griffin took …