Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Black progressive Cori Bush is officially going to Congress

Bush defeated a 10-term Democratic incumbent in a primary earlier this year.

Rep.-elect Cori Bush celebrates with supporters during her election night watch party on November 3, 2020, in St. Louis, Missouri.
Rep.-elect Cori Bush celebrates with supporters during her election night watch party on November 3, 2020, in St. Louis, Missouri.
Rep.-elect Cori Bush celebrates with supporters during her election night watch party on November 3, 2020, in St. Louis, Missouri.
Michael B. Thomas/Getty Images

Cori Bush, a rising progressive star in the Democratic Party, handily won a first term in the US House of Representatives on Election Day.

The Black progressive previously defeated a 10-term incumbent Democrat, Rep. William Lacy Clay Jr., in this year’s primary for Missouri’s First District, which covers the Democratic stronghold of St. Louis. Insofar as Bush won an election as a Democrat in St. Louis, that’s not too surprising. But as Aaron Ross Coleman wrote for Vox at the time, Bush’s victory in the primary was a surprising upset — one spurred by her strong support for the Black Lives Matter movement:

Bush, a 44-year-old single mother, nurse, and leader in the 2014 Ferguson uprising, ousted 64-year-old, 10-term incumbent Clay in the St. Louis-area district. The bout was a rematch of the 2018 race, which Clay won by a 20-point margin. Both candidates are Black. However, Bush’s candidacy this time spoke to the moment, with her connections to a movement sweeping the nation following the killing of George Floyd and the sustained protests since the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, a city in the district.

Clay, on the other hand, was criticized by activists who claimed he hadn’t heavily participated in Black Lives Matter protests, and that he’d rejected calls to “defund the police.”

But, Coleman added, Bush made gains in other areas too, representing “an anti-corporate insurgency that has been brewing in the Democratic Party more broadly.” Clay could argue he’s a progressive given his support of Medicare-for-all and a Green New Deal, but he also took campaign donations from some controversial sources, including big banks.

Bush’s victory falls within the broader context of Black progressives winning big races in the House. As Ella Nilsen wrote for Vox:

A new group of Black progressives has officially been elected to Congress.

It’s been a year defined in part by nationwide protests against police brutality and systemic racism after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Meanwhile, unabashedly progressive Black candidates ran in — and won — races around the country. It’s another step toward meaningful representation for Black and brown constituents.

“We need more people in Congress for whom policy is personal. I was the only candidate talking about racial justice before the events of the past several weeks,” presumptive member of Congress Mondaire Jones (D-NY) told Vox this summer. “I’m grateful more people now are seeing it.”

This kind of broad representation matters. Bush, as a single member of the House, may not be able to do much on her own. But with these crucial progressive allies backing her in the legislature, perhaps her vision for America will have a better chance of being reflected in bills next year.

Politics
The danger of Trump’s promise to pardon J6 defendantsThe danger of Trump’s promise to pardon J6 defendants
Politics

Trump told NBC that making the pardons would be one of his day-one priorities.

By Ellen Ioanes
Vox’s guide to Donald Trump’s 2024 policies
Wait — do Harris and Trump actually agree on fracking?Wait — do Harris and Trump actually agree on fracking?
Vox’s guide to Donald Trump’s 2024 policies

The case for and against fracking, politics aside.

By Umair Irfan
Politics
What the Kamala Harris identity debate shows about AmericaWhat the Kamala Harris identity debate shows about America
Politics

Identity is complicated, and she shouldn’t have to choose just one.

By Nisha Chittal
Investigations into Donald Trump
How Atlanta prosecutor Fani Willis took on Donald TrumpHow Atlanta prosecutor Fani Willis took on Donald Trump
Investigations into Donald Trump

The former president was charged with 13 counts in Georgia.

By Andrew Prokop
Investigations into Donald Trump
Trump’s Georgia indictment, briefly explainedTrump’s Georgia indictment, briefly explained
Investigations into Donald Trump

It’s the fourth time that Trump has been indicted.

By Nicole Narea
Investigations into Donald Trump
Trump was just indicted for trying to steal the 2020 electionTrump was just indicted for trying to steal the 2020 election
Investigations into Donald Trump

Your biggest questions about the federal criminal charges against Trump in the January 6 case, answered.

By Nicole Narea