"Y'all vote?! Did you?" Faircloth, 35, hollered repeatedly at
people, who smiled when they recognized him as he canvassed the
area last weekend.
Faircloth, a corporate trainer, says he has always been an
advocate for his community. But that role became more urgent
when his friend and Third Ward native, African-American George
Floyd, died in May after a white Minneapolis police knelt on his
neck for nearly nine minutes.
The summer's simmering anger and demands for justice that
Floyd's death ignited have transformed into huge voter turnout
for Black Americans in some parts of the country. That is
especially true of the Third Ward, where hopes for change have
energized many in the final days of the race between President
Donald Trump, a Republican, and Democratic rival Joe Biden.
Early voting at the Third Ward's three polling stations is up
more than 650% compared to 2016 figures, according to data from
the Harris County Clerk's Office.
"Look, man. Voting is not the end-all-be-all. It's just the
start," Faircloth said. "But we're telling people: 'If you want
change, this is how you begin to change things.'"
The Third Ward, a patchwork of old wooden homes, bodegas and
barber shops with hand-painted storefronts less than a mile from
downtown Houston's skyscrapers, houses some of the city's crown
jewels for African-American culture, including Texas Southern
University.
Floyd, who played college football and basketball, was a mentor
to neighborhood boys and encouraged them with his optimism,
Faircloth recalls. Third Ward residents were enraged by the
brutal manner in which Floyd died, which was captured on video
by a bystander.
"Seeing that video was almost as if we were watching slaves
being beaten in real life," Faircloth said. "Instead of whips,
the weapons were a knee and a badge."
Third Ward residents who knew Floyd best marched daily, as Black
Lives Matter protests spread across the globe. In Houston, they
were joined by Police Chief Art Acevedo, who told Reuters he
remembers Faircloth and other young Black leaders from the Third
Ward helping maintain the peace during protests.
Floyd's death was a tragic reminder that policing is not where
it should be, Acevedo said. He recalls telling Third Ward
residents, and others in Houston, that there's not just one way
to fix that problem. "We told people that it's really important
that they not just take to the streets, but that they take to
the polls during the election," he said.
"VOTING FOR GEORGE"
Voters who Reuters spoke to in the Third Ward and nearby said
they emerged from this summer's protests not just more
politically active, but also confident they can make their
voices heard.
"It feels like we're in a new Civil Rights era," said J.D.
Fontenot, a pharmacy student at Texas Southern University.
The world he and other young minorities are beginning to help
shape feels like a mirror image of the days of Martin Luther
King Jr. and Malcolm X, he said, and voting is a first step.
"The fact that our vote is directly linked to Black people's
freedom in America is on the minds of people right now,"
Fontenot said.
So is tension between Blacks and whites.
"The racial injustice we are seeing right now, which had been
subliminal but now spews forth in the open, is making it clear
to the Black community that we have to come out and vote," said
daycare worker Veronica McClendon, 53, who was born and raised
in the nearby Fifth Ward.
Faircloth and two other members of the Alpha Phi Alpha Black
fraternity - Carlos Pinkerton and Sheldon Hadnot - canvassed
door-to-door in the Third Ward last weekend.
When they spotted Arnetta Taylor outside her home, they wouldn't
take no for an answer. Dispelling her concerns about a missing
voter registration card, they explained other forms of ID she
could use and got her commitment to go to the polls.
"Take my number and call me on Monday to make sure I voted! I'm
46-years-old and I've never voted in my life, but I will now,"
Taylor said.
She was clear about her motivation.
"We're voting for George," she said. "We're voting for Breonna
Taylor, too. We're voting for a lot of Black people that have
been killed in this way."
(Reporting by Brad Brooks; editing by Heather Timmons and Tom
Brown)
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