

Breaking news from Cleveland, Ohio from a Black perspective.©2025
Wed10082025
Last update10:49:15 pm
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Cleveland Ward 1 Councilman Joe Jones has endorsed Shontel Brown and Ward 6 Councilman Blaine Griffin, Nina Turner relative to the special election for Congress in Ohio's majority Black 11th congressional district, which includes Cleveland, a largely Black pocket of Akron and staggering suburbs of Cuyahoga and Summit counties.
Both Jones and Grifffin are Black.
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine has set the primary election for Aug. 3 and the general for Nov, 2 as there are seven declared candidates thus far who hope to replace former congresswoman Marcia L. Fudge, Fudge now the secretary of Housing and Urban Development in President Joe Biden's cabinet.
Griffin is city's council's public safety committee chair and a wannabe city council president, and is a former Community Relations Board director under four-term Black mayor Frank Jackson, who has not said whether he will seek an historic fifth term as mayor this year.
Jones leads the ward with the strongest voting bloc of Black voters and the second strongest voting bloc of the city's 17 wards, the largely Black wards of which are east side wards on the majority Black major American city and the majority White wards primarily west side wards.
"We are going to support Shontel Brown 100 percent because she has been committed and dedicated to serving the community," said Jones of his endorsement of Brown.
Griffin was equally supportive of his candidate, and called Turner, also a former city councilwoman of Jones' Ward 1, a " visionary leader, fiercely committed to improving the lives of people in this community."
Each of the city's wards are comprised of roughly 23,000 residents and Cleveland has some 385,000 residents overall.
Griffin's ward consists of Fairfax, Larchmere, Little Italy, Woodland Hills, and parts of Buckeye-Shaker, University Circle, North Broadway, Slavic Village and Union-Miles, and Jones' ward Lee-Harvard, Lee-Seville, Union-Miles, and part of Mount Pleasant.
The endorsement by Griffin of Turner and by Jones of Brown furthers the racial divide, sources say.
Both Brown and Turner are considered front-runners in a hard-to-call congressional race.
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson has endorsed former Ohio senator Nina Turner relative to the special election for Congress in Ohio's majority Black 11th congressional district, which includes Cleveland, a largely Black pocket of Akron and select suburbs of Cuyahoga and Summit counties.
How much influence the four-term Black mayor's endorsement will have remains to be seen since he is not running for a fifth term this year, sources said.
Jackson joins other prominent Cleveland elected officials who have endorsed Turner, including state Sen Sandra Williams and Ward 6 Councilman Blaine Griffin, who endorsed her on Monday.
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine has set the primary election for Aug. 3 and the general for Nov. 2 as there are seven declared candidates who hope to replace former congresswoman Marcia L. Fudge in Washington, Fudge now the secretary of Housing and Urban Development in President Joe Biden's cabinet.
Jackson said he views Turner, a front-runner in the congressional race, as the best candidate.
“When we consider the needs of the 11th Congressional District and the moment we’re in as a nation - a moment that calls for a higher commitment to social justice, to create economic growth and development through the lens of equity, and to disrupt systemic issues with systemic solutions, now is the time to elect Nina Turner," Jackson said
A 2020 co-chair of Bernie Sanders' presidential bid who lost a bid for Ohio secretary of state in 2014 against Republican Jon Husted, who is now Ohio's lieutenant governor, Turner is a former aide to former mayor Michael R. White and a former Ward 1 councilwoman who was elected to city council in 2005, the year Jackson, then a city council president, won election over then mayor Jane Campbell, who succeeded White into office.
After an appointment to the Ohio senate in 2008 to an unexpired term she went on to win election and served until 2014, the year she unsuccessfully ran for secretary of state .
The mayor's endorsement tightens the contest against Turner's front-runner opponent, Cuyahoga County Democratic Party Chairwoman and County Councilwoman Shontel Brown, a Fudge protégé who has a list of influential endorsements too, including U.S. Rep. Joyce Beatty of Columbus, Cleveland Ward 1 Councilman Joe Jones, and a host of unions and several suburban mayors.
It also raises questions about Jackson's relationship with Fudge since he has endorsed Turner over Brown, though Fudge has not endorsed any candidate and likely will stay out of the race as a federal employee subject to the Hatch Act.
Like Turner, who considered a run against Fudge at one point but backed down due to political pressure, Fudge has been a long time ally of Jackson, and she is a former Warrensville Heights mayor who served in Congress for 12 years until Biden tapped her for HUD secretary.
Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com
CLEVELAND, Ohio — The United Auto Workers Region 2B, which covers Ohio and Indiana, has endorsed Shontel Brown, the chair of the Cuyahoga County Democratic Party and a county councilwoman, in the special election for Congress in Ohio's majority Black 11th congressional district, which includes Cleveland, a largely Black pocket of Akron and staggering suburbs of Cuyahoga and Summit counties.
The UAW has some 2800 members in the 11th congressional district, and Brown has the support of more labor unions than all of the other candidates combined, her campaign said in a press release.
"Shontel Brown has stood with us on picket lines. She listens and brings people together, and that makes her a compassionate and effective leader," said Wayne Blanchard, the Director of UAW Region 2B, which covers Ohio and Indiana. "We are confident Shontel will work with President Biden and with her constituents to Build Back Better."
Brown was elated about the endorsement from the powerful auto union.
"The endorsement of the United Auto Workers Region 2B means the world to me," said Brown. "It is another sign that voters want a congresswoman who will partner with the Biden administration to lead Northeast Ohio's economic recovery from this pandemic."
The first woman and first Black woman to lead the county Democratic party, Brown said that "I hear every day from people in our district who can't afford some combination of health care, housing, education, and groceries. That's unacceptable and must change. I will work with the Biden Administration and organized labor to create a recovery in Northeast Ohio that lifts all families and workers."
Among a long list of others, she has been endorsed by Ohio U.S. Rep. Joyce Beatty of Columbus, 15 labor unions, and dozens of mayors, community leaders, and elected officials.
Brown said that if she is elected to Congress she will work with President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris for comprehensive health and economic recovery from the pandemic.
She is a protege of Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Marcia L. Fudge, who has not endorsed in the competitive race to replace her in Congress, Fudge resigning from the congressional seat she held for 12 years after the U.S. Senate, on March 10, confirmed her nomination as HUD secretary.
Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview, CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.
CLEVELAND, Ohio-Black Leaders, Black activists and Black candidates for Ohio's 11th congressional district seat joined hundreds in Cleveland's Asian community on Sunday for a rally in AsiaTown on Cleveland's largely Black east side, which followed earlier rallies and marches in support of Asians, including in Solon and by Women's March Cleveland last week at Market Square in Ohio City on the city's west side.
But you would not know it if you reference coverage by Cleveland's largely White local mainstream media, which virtually ignored the fact that Blacks of consequence were there, including Ward 7 Councilman Basheer Jones, whose ward includes AsiaTown and was the only Black man who spoke at the event.
Unlike others promoted by the media, they showed Jones and a few in masks but what not say who they were, and this was by design, sources said, and Black grassroots Cleveland activists were discounted altogether.
Cleveland is a largely Black major American city.
They also ignored the fact that Cleveland activist Kathy Wray Coleman, who leads the Imperial Women Coalition and Women's March Cleveland, helped to lead the march through the streets of AsiaTown.
Coverage by the Cleveland Plain Dealer and Cleveland.com did not mention the name or quote one Black elected official who participated in the event, and this type of activity is routine for Ohio's largest newspaper.
"Activists are tired and fed-up of constantly being overlooked by Cleveland's mainstream media and we have a problem too about how they subordinate and overlook Black elected officials and Black leaders in general," said activist Alfred Porter Jr, who leads Black on Black Crime Inc and attended Sunday's event.
The recent nationwide outcry against hate crimes and harassment of the Asian community comes behind the shooting deaths in Atlanta by a White male gunmen of eight people at three different spas, six of them Asian women
Black elected officials joining Sunday's rally and march also included Ward 6 Councilman Blaine Griffin, Ward 9 Councilman Kevin Conwell, Cuyahoga County Councilwoman Yvonne Conwell, and state Rep. Juanita Brent of Cleveland.
Mayoral candidate and former Cleveland councilman Zack Reed was also among the prominent Black dignitaries there.
Ohio 11th congressional district candidates Nina Turner, John Barnes Jr, Shontel Brown and Jeff Johnson were also there, Turner a former Ohio senator and Bernie Sanders surrogate, Brown a county councilwoman and chair of the Cuyahoga County Democratic Party, and Barnes Jr., a former state representative.
Also a former state senator, Johnson represented AsiaTown when he was a councilman.
Protesters chanted "Stop Asian Hate," "No Justice No Peace, "Asians Are Welcome Here" and other chants as they marched through the community streets of AsiaTown .
Clevelandurbannews.com and Kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com, the most read Black digital newspaper and Black blog in Ohio and in the Midwest. Tel: (216) 659-0473. Email: editor@clevelandurbannews.com. We interviewed former president Barack Obama one-on-one when he was campaigning for president. As to the Obama interview, CLICK HERE TO READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE AT CLEVELAND URBAN NEWS.COM, OHIO'S LEADER IN BLACK DIGITAL NEWS.