This week's Good Look features Melissa's Sunday Footnote, in which she remembered the late Rep. Barbara Jordan of Texas, who delivered the Democratic National Convention's keynote address in 1976, becoming the first African American woman to do so. I was reminded of Jordan's speech when I saw another woman address this year's convention, one without elected office, but with similar social ostracism as the gay, black Congresswoman with multiple sclerosis.
On Wednesday night, 27-year-old Benita Velez became the first undocumented immigrant to address a national party convention. In her speech, she defended her inherent American character and identity while also expressing an optimism about how we all can contribute, politically, socially, and economically.
Paraphrasing something Georgetown professor Michael Eric Dyson once told me in an interview about the struggle for racial equality, it's all about being put on a level playing field, not gaining some sort of retributive advantage (as those with the built-in advantages would have us believe). Given the venue in which Velez made her remarks, it's fitting to quote something Jordan said about the Democratic Party:
We believe in equality for all and privileges for none. This is a belief -- this is a belief that each American, regardless of of background, has equal standing in the public forum -- all of us. Because -- because we believe this idea so firmly, we are an inclusive rather than an exclusive party. Let everybody come.
At their 2012 convention, Democrats lived up to that, to an extent (I still needed to see a speaker who wasn't cisgender, for example). And outside of the venue where Velez spoke, there were still undocumented immigrants protesting for the very pathway to citizenship, screaming and blocking traffic to be a full part of this nation. In that regard, even for Democrats, the struggle continues.
Join us for a full breakdown of the Democratic convention, and much more, at 10am on msnbc!
Footnote: Melissa Harris-Perry shares the 1976 keynote DNC speech given by Barbara Jordan.


MHP, thank you for remembering Congresswoman Barbara Jordan.
I amoften ashamed to live in TX from a state still very much in process to overcome it's past. Barbara Jordan, along with Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, Mayor Annise Parker, Gov. Ann Richards, LadyBird Johnson, Molly Ivins, and one of my new heroes the late Mrs. Billye Carr (Molly Ivins wrote her obit, and it's the best I've ever read) are for me the redeeming qualities in response to Gov. Perry and w bush.
Another hero gone.
Congresswoman Barbara Jordon was the first African American woman that I remember seeing as a child who was in politics. I remember reading about her in Ebony magazine. She contributed so much to America. It's too bad that some children and young adults of today don't even know who she is. I hope she is being taught about to our children in our school system. Babara RIP.