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In reply to the discussion: What are the ethnic demographics in Queens? [View all]Otto Lidenbrock
(581 posts)3. "Bernie Sanders Rally By Queensbridge Houses Blindsides Residents"
LONG ISLAND CITY, QUEENS As Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders and his supporters flocked to Queensbridge Park for a campaign rally Saturday, residents who live across the street in Queensbridge Houses the nation's largest public housing project were in their monthly tenant association meeting.
No one had told them about the Sanders rally, they said.
April Simpson, president of the Queensbridge Tenants Association, said she got a call from the Sanders campaign only the day before to inform her about the rally and ask if she was attending. She told the campaign staffer about the scheduling conflict.
"These people were coming from near, far but they weren't from Queensbridge," Simpson told Patch in an interview. "That rally wasn't for us."
Simpson said there were no flyers publicizing the rally in Queensbridge's buildings, which more than 6,000 people call home.
A Sanders campaign spokesperson said the team handed out flyers to Queensbridge residents going in and out of their buildings on Friday, the day before the rally, and had reached out to Simpson as soon as they got her contact information and invited her to meet with Sanders.
But Simpson said she felt slighted.
"The residents that were sitting in the meeting, they said they found out from all the people going past," Simpson added, calling the lack of outreach "disrespectful."
And yet Queensbridge Houses served as a rallying cry for the elected officials on stage Saturday, including U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who was there to officially endorse the Vermont senator for president.
"Let's acknowledge the ground that we are on, which is the ground zero for the fight for public housing, and fully funded, dignified housing in the United States of America," Ocasio-Cortez said during the rally, according to a Gothamist report.
Corbin Trent, a campaign spokesperson for Ocasio-Cortez, declined to comment for this story.
Bishop Mitchell Taylor, a community leader who grew up in Queensbridge Houses, said he was concerned the Sanders campaign didn't reach out to residents prior to the rally and added that it "seemed to be a pretty white rally " when he passed by.
"They chose a picture over a population," he said in an interview. "How could you use Queensbridge Park as your rallying point but not engage Queensbridge people as a part of the rally?"
The Sanders campaign previously told a news reporter for Gothamist that staffers had posted flyers leading up to the rally but didn't specify where the flyers were.
Instead, it was the flood of attendees emerging from the 21st Street-Queensbridge F train station that clued many Queensbridge residents in to what was happening in the park that bears the same name as their home.
"Everybody was like, 'What's going on?'" community activist and lifelong Queensbridge resident Billy Robinson, 55, told Patch. "We just saw a stream of people coming from the subway to the park with Bernie Sanders signs."
"You've got the biggest projects in the world, and you didn't even let the people there know what's going on in their own neighborhood," Robinson said.
No one had told them about the Sanders rally, they said.
April Simpson, president of the Queensbridge Tenants Association, said she got a call from the Sanders campaign only the day before to inform her about the rally and ask if she was attending. She told the campaign staffer about the scheduling conflict.
"These people were coming from near, far but they weren't from Queensbridge," Simpson told Patch in an interview. "That rally wasn't for us."
Simpson said there were no flyers publicizing the rally in Queensbridge's buildings, which more than 6,000 people call home.
A Sanders campaign spokesperson said the team handed out flyers to Queensbridge residents going in and out of their buildings on Friday, the day before the rally, and had reached out to Simpson as soon as they got her contact information and invited her to meet with Sanders.
But Simpson said she felt slighted.
"The residents that were sitting in the meeting, they said they found out from all the people going past," Simpson added, calling the lack of outreach "disrespectful."
And yet Queensbridge Houses served as a rallying cry for the elected officials on stage Saturday, including U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who was there to officially endorse the Vermont senator for president.
"Let's acknowledge the ground that we are on, which is the ground zero for the fight for public housing, and fully funded, dignified housing in the United States of America," Ocasio-Cortez said during the rally, according to a Gothamist report.
Corbin Trent, a campaign spokesperson for Ocasio-Cortez, declined to comment for this story.
Bishop Mitchell Taylor, a community leader who grew up in Queensbridge Houses, said he was concerned the Sanders campaign didn't reach out to residents prior to the rally and added that it "seemed to be a pretty white rally " when he passed by.
"They chose a picture over a population," he said in an interview. "How could you use Queensbridge Park as your rallying point but not engage Queensbridge people as a part of the rally?"
The Sanders campaign previously told a news reporter for Gothamist that staffers had posted flyers leading up to the rally but didn't specify where the flyers were.
Instead, it was the flood of attendees emerging from the 21st Street-Queensbridge F train station that clued many Queensbridge residents in to what was happening in the park that bears the same name as their home.
"Everybody was like, 'What's going on?'" community activist and lifelong Queensbridge resident Billy Robinson, 55, told Patch. "We just saw a stream of people coming from the subway to the park with Bernie Sanders signs."
"You've got the biggest projects in the world, and you didn't even let the people there know what's going on in their own neighborhood," Robinson said.
https://patch.com/new-york/astoria-long-island-city/queensbridge-residents-say-they-didnt-know-sanders-rally
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"50% white, 28% Hispanic, 24% Asian, 21% black, and 3% mixed" equals 126% (n/t)
thesquanderer
Oct 2019
#5
Hispanics are often counted twice - as Hispanic and also as white or black
StarfishSaver
Oct 2019
#32
Better check your figures. Queens isn't 50% white. It's maybe half that as Queens is as diverse...
brush
Oct 2019
#22
It's very diverse. Every faith and ethnic group is there and maybe a fourth is white.
brush
Oct 2019
#33
As I mentioned over the weekend, the highlight of the event was to be the appearance of AOC...
George II
Oct 2019
#10
Queens County is a very diverse county. If it wasn't part of New York City....
George II
Oct 2019
#6
61.4% African American ... They clearly weren't interested in the BS speech.
NurseJackie
Oct 2019
#8
You can't get much more ethnic diversity than Queens. Every race and faith is there.
brush
Oct 2019
#13
Agreed. He definitely does not have the confidence (or support) of the AA community...
NurseJackie
Oct 2019
#19
His campaign would do better to get busy with GOTV efforts in those same housing projects.
cwydro
Oct 2019
#16
According to a Univision poll from July (admittedly about 3 months old, right after the 1st debate):
George II
Oct 2019
#25
Indeed! It was a golden opportunity to engage the AA and POC communities...
NurseJackie
Oct 2019
#23
The project in the background of the photo is the Queensbridge Houses where roughly 7,000....
George II
Oct 2019
#27
He's actually doing the 2nd best with POC (Biden is obviously top there) If Pete were pulling Bernie
Celerity
Oct 2019
#34
"Looks to be very diverse" - unlike the attendees of the rally. By the numbers....
George II
Oct 2019
#45