Senator from District 28 honors unsung Black women and pledges protest over redistricting

Senate · February 6, 2026

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Summary

In a Black History Month address, the senator from District 28 highlighted Pauli Murray, Ella Baker and Fannie Lou Hamer, alleged racial firings under the current administration and announced a pledge not to return to the podium until a mid‑cycle redistricting bill is brought to the floor.

The senator from District 28 delivered the Senate's Black History Month remarks on Feb. 5, honoring the legal and grassroots contributions of Black women such as Pauli Murray, Ella Baker and Fannie Lou Hamer. The senator framed them as "the architects of freedom," credited Murray as a Maryland legal mind and emphasized grassroots organizing.

Toward the end of the remarks the senator criticized current conditions for Black Americans and for Black women in Maryland, saying, "so many black women in Maryland, in my district, have been fired because of their race by this administration." The senator described personal ties to the issue: "I have a cousin who was fired." The speech concluded with a procedural protest: the senator said they would "not come back to this podium and to give quote to this body until we bring the mid cycle redistricting bill to this floor," framing the action as a protest to pressure federal or state redistricting policy.

The senator's comments combined historical context — noting Murray's legal work and local roots — with a contemporary political pledge to press for a mid‑cycle redistricting measure on the Senate floor. The remarks closed with the senator requesting leave for the protest action.

What happens next: The speech and the senator's stated protest are floor activity recorded in the Feb. 5 session. The chamber did not record a formal response or motion addressing the senator's pledge during the remainder of the session.