Close Menu
  • Home
  • News
    • Local
  • Opinion
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Podcast

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

COMMENTARY: 50 Years Later, is ‘Roots’ on the Wrong Side of History?

COMMENTARY: Hey, Cousin: What I Saw On Juneteenth At Andrew Jackson’s Plantation

OP-ED: Knicks Fans Want Them to Wear Tan Suits to the White House

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcast
  • Contact Us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
The Windy City Word
  • Home
  • News
    1. Local
    2. View All

    Uncle Remus Says Similar Restaurant Name Is Diluting Its Brand and Misleading Customers

    Youth curfew vote stalled in Chicago City Council’s public safety committee

    Organizers, CBA Coalition pushback on proposed luxury hotel near Obama Presidential Center

    New petition calls for state oversight and new leadership at Roseland Community Hospital

    Isaac Cook: A Local High School Standout to Watch

    Giving Birth Costs Remain a Major Concern for Expecting Families

    Photo Gallery: The FIFA World Cup 2026™ Vibes are in Atlanta!

    Juneteenth and the Revolutionary Power of Rest for Black Women

  • Opinion

    Rep Davis, Olive Post CDR., Call on Trump to Restore file of Black Vietnam War Hero to Website

    Capitalize on Slower Car Dealership Sales in 2025

    The High Cost Of Wealth Worship

    What Every Black Child Needs in the World

    Changing the Game: Westside Mom Shares Bally’s Job Experience with Son

  • Business

    Illinois Department of Innovation & Technology supplier diversity office to host procurement webinar for vendors

    Crusader Publisher host Ukrainian Tech Businessmen eyeing Gary investment

    Sims applauds $220,000 in local Back to Business grants

    New Hire360 partnership to support diversity in local trades

    Taking your small business to the next level

  • Health

    Giving Birth Costs Remain a Major Concern for Expecting Families

    Juneteenth and the Revolutionary Power of Rest for Black Women

    Summer Body Workouts Move Beyond Cardio as Strength Training Grows

    The Growing Concern Around Commercial Vehicle Accidents on Busy Highways

    Doctors Seeing More Cases of Preventable Childhood Illnesses

  • Education

    Military Child Care, a National Model, Faces Limitations

    COMMENTARY: Joy of Educating Black Boys

    ‘Find a Way or Make a Way’: Congresswoman Nikema Williams Announces $250,000 in Campus Security Funding for CAU

    How UNCF is Cultivating the Next Generation of Legacy Leaders

    Black Student Loan Default Rate Five Times Higher than Whites

  • Sports

    Isaac Cook: A Local High School Standout to Watch

    Photo Gallery: The FIFA World Cup 2026™ Vibes are in Atlanta!

    U.S. Men’s National Team Names its Roster for World Cup 2026

    U.S. Men’s National Team Names its Roster for World Cup 2026

    U.S. Men’s National Team Names its Roster for World Cup 2026

  • Podcast
The Windy City Word
Featured

COMMENTARY: From Reconstruction to the SAVE Act

staffBy staffUpdated:No Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

By Dr. Julianne Malveaux

Frederick Douglass did not know the day he was born.

Like many enslaved people, he was denied even the dignity of documentation. Birth dates were approximations. Family lines were severed. Identity existed in property ledgers, not in public record.

His mother, Harriet Bailey, called him her “little Valentine,” and Douglass later chose February 14 as his birthday — an act of self-definition in a country that refused to define him as fully human.

That act matters.

Douglass understood something fundamental: identity is not granted by paperwork. It is asserted through presence, voice and participation. He claimed authorship over his own life in a nation structured to deny it.

Today, we are debating whether documentation should determine access to democracy.

The SAVE Act would require documentary proof of citizenship to register to vote in federal elections. Passports. Birth certificates. Paper trails. Supporters frame it as administrative protection. But the history of American democracy teaches us that administrative mechanisms are rarely neutral.

Paperwork has always been political.

After Reconstruction, when Black political participation expanded, new rules narrowed the electorate. Literacy tests. Poll taxes. Grandfather clauses. Each was presented as procedural. Each functioned as a barrier.

The methods change. The objective — control over who counts — does not.

Documentation requirements would fall hardest on those least likely to have ready access to formal records: seniors born at home in the Jim Crow South, low-income Americans without passports, married women whose legal names no longer match their birth certificates. Even producing paperwork can become a test of belonging.

Documented cases of noncitizen voting are exceedingly rare. The question is not fraud prevention; it is access.

Reconstruction was not only about emancipation. It was about participation. Black men voted. Black officials were elected. Black institutions were built. And when those gains threatened entrenched power, backlash followed.

In 1898, in Wilmington, North Carolina, a legitimately elected multiracial government was overthrown. Black political power was dismantled. The ballot was replaced by the bullet. It was not disorder; it was organized suppression.

The lesson is sobering. When participation expands, resistance emerges.

Today’s debates unfold in legislative chambers rather than in armed mobs. But the question remains: who has the authority to define citizenship?

Douglass claimed his identity in a system that denied him documentation. He did not wait for official recognition to assert his humanity. He understood that democracy depends not on perfect records, but on inclusive participation.

When paperwork becomes a prerequisite for political voice, we should ask whether we are strengthening democracy — or narrowing it.

The struggle over the ballot has never been merely procedural. It has always been about power.

Douglass defined himself when the state would not.

The question now is whether we will let the state decide who counts.

Dr. Julianne Malveaux is a Washington, D.C.-based economist and author.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
Previous ArticleAFUWI – Gala to Honor Outstanding Leaders
Next Article Subaru Real Off-Roader, Worth Every Penny! #shorts
staff

Related Posts

COMMENTARY: 50 Years Later, is ‘Roots’ on the Wrong Side of History?

COMMENTARY: Hey, Cousin: What I Saw On Juneteenth At Andrew Jackson’s Plantation

OP-ED: Knicks Fans Want Them to Wear Tan Suits to the White House

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Video of the Week
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AxFXtgzTu4U
Advertisement
Video of the Week
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjfvYnUXHuI
ABOUT US

 

The Windy City Word is a weekly newspaper that projects a positive image of the community it serves. It reflects life on the Greater West Side as seen by the people who live and work here.

OUR PICKS

Only 4 Days Until Election Day… Healing with Sharon Sayles Belton

Trade School: Skip College, Start Earning Big Now!

Why Brands Must Embrace Hybrid Technology NOW

MOST POPULAR

Giving Birth Costs Remain a Major Concern for Expecting Families

Juneteenth and the Revolutionary Power of Rest for Black Women

Summer Body Workouts Move Beyond Cardio as Strength Training Grows

© 2026 The Windy City Word. Site Designed by No Regret Medai.
  • Home
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcast
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.