Washington Post – Politics:
In this edition: A guide to today’s many primaries, Biden and Trump navigate civil unrest, and new polls find a country siding with the protesters.
Washington Post – Politics:
In this edition: A guide to today’s many primaries, Biden and Trump navigate civil unrest, and new polls find a country siding with the protesters.

Washington Post – Politics:
The former president’s statement does not mention President Trump, but his call for compassion and unity presents a stark contrast to the incumbent’s rhetoric.
Washington Post – Politics:
The House Armed Services Committee wants Esper and Milley to testify while the Judiciary Committee chairman, rebuffed by Barr, is calling for a cut in the budget for his personal office.
Washington Post – Politics:
The evidence strongly suggests that the motivation was Trump’s visit to St. John’s Church.
Essence Magazine:
Today is déjà vu as black tiles flood social media in support of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery, three Black Americans who lost their lives due to the systemic racism boiling in America.
Five years ago, Black America was mourning too. Although the 2012 death of Trayon Martin still felt fresh in our hearts, we were processing the deaths of Eric Garner, Mike Brown, and Tamir Rice—three Black men who had been killed by the hand of a White police officer in 2014.
News of Rice’s murder, which happened on November 22, came as ESSENCE was in production for its February 2015 issue. The theme was love and legacy and we were finalizing which hot couple we’d photograph. But the editors didn’t feel much like celebrating romance. We were in pain. We were angry. We were tired.
Then editor-in-chief Vanessa de Luca walked into her creative director’s office and threw out an idea. “What if we go black?” remembers Erika Perry, ESSENCE creative director in 2015. “It was Black History Month, and after she said it, we couldn’t have imagined doing anything else at that point.”

For the first time in ESSENCE’s 45 year history, we didn’t feature a person on the cover. Said Perry, “I only questioned whether we’d have a completely black cover or have cover lines to shape our message.” There was only one sentence we wanted to send far and wide: Black. Lives. Matter.
The cover, released in mid-January, went viral. Readers, organizations and media applauded our boldness. On MSNBC, de Luca explained our urgency to document our collective feeling. She said, “We wanted to make sure we captured this tipping point in our history, but not just Black history, but American history.”
Thought leaders, activists, celebrities, politicos, journalists and authors wrote essays on “What We Must Do Now.” Voices included: Angela Davis, John Legend, Michele Alexander, Rev. Al Sharpton and more.
As journalists, and more importantly as Black women, we declared America’s deep problem with racial injustice. Today, we’re still reporting how this country’s systemic racism kills people of color. Today we’re mourning new names of Americans murdered for being Black. Today we amplify George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery. Today, and every day, we shout Black lives matter.
The post 5 Years After ESSENCE’s #BlackOut, America Is Still In A Racial Crisis appeared first on Essence.

Essence Magazine:
“Chaotic and crazy.” That’s how photographer Bellamy Brewster describes the protest that led him to the streets of Los Angeles, California over the weekend. Brewster, who makes a living shooting beautiful clothes, models, and locales, said the demonstration stemming from the deaths of Black men and women at the hands of law enforcement propelled him to turn his camera to another subject — social injustice.
For the last several days the New York native has been grabbing his camera and heading out to West Hollywood to capture the righteous rage being experienced by so many in America right now. On the first day he expected to meet protesters moved to action. He expected to find people so fed up with the current state of the country that they were driven to demand change. But what he didn’t expect was a baton to the stomach and a hard look at the power of white privilege.
Brewster’s first foray into social justice protests was quite naturally shocking. “At first everything was incredible because I saw familiar faces and friends handing out water bottles. I was like ‘this is awesome, this is great, this is fantastic,’” Brewster tells ESSENCE. “But as I got closer and closer to the front, things began to feel different.”
When Brewster made his way to the head of the protesters, he says the atmosphere began to feel hectic. “I got to the front of the march and the dynamics of the protest had changed,” he recalls. “It didn’t make sense to me that police were blocking the way in the middle of the street where people were trying to peacefully march. When I tried to go around on the sidewalk, I was immediately hit with a baton.”
Photo: Bellamy Brewster
Brewster shares that in the moment he was stunned. And on Instagram, he later described the incident as eye-opening. After protestors witnessed his abuse at the hands of law enforcement, a white woman who was attending the march, pulled him back and positioned herself in front of him.
“What happened next reshaped my entire perspective on race and this country,” Brewster writes on IG. “The same cop that hit me with a baton gripped his baton less tightly, less willing to harm the white people in front of me. This is white privilege. This is an illustration of what it means to be Black in our country.”
While the vast majority of the West Hollywood protestors were there to peacefully make a statement, Brewster says the scene turned chaotic when met by authorities. “It’s intense. It’s like you’re in this little realm. Things are happening around you and it’s literally like being in a war zone,” the creative director shares with ESSENCE. “Someone runs past me, I hear a sound. They’re running from rubber bullets. I shoot. I try to capture that as best I can in my frantic state. My shutter speed is blurry, I think quickly in my frantic state and I shoot.” Brewster says next to him is someone with shards of glass in their leg. Others are taken down by the projectiles coming from officers.
Photo: Bellamy Brewster
“People are trying to march. People want to be heard. People want to be seen. People want to be understood,” says Brewster. “But, what happens, as humans, when you’re trying to have a conversation and you’re not hearing me. I’m not being heard, my words aren’t being heard, eventually, things begin to boil over.”
The post Righteous Rage: Los Angeles Photographer Turns Lens To Social Injustice appeared first on Essence.
Washington Post – Politics:
The GOP chair said Tuesday that the party has an “obligation” to look beyond North Carolina for its August convention. The governor said he can’t provide the “guarantee” Republican officials seek for a full arena, given the pandemic.
Washington Post – Politics:
Even now, there isn’t much incentive for Republicans to depart from Trump
Washington Post – Politics:
The show of aggression by federal law enforcement officers, which came shortly before President Trump made an appearance at a church nearby, drew widespread condemnation.