Home / Full timeline / Sharon Pratt Dixon, Eleanor Holmes Norton, and civil rights activist Jesse Jackson, all newcomers to District of Columbia politics, are victorious at the polls.
Sharon Pratt Dixon, Eleanor Holmes Norton, and civil rights activist Jesse Jackson, all newcomers to District of Columbia politics, are victorious at the polls.
1990 (Sep 11)
Sharon Pratt Dixon, Eleanor Holmes Norton, and civil rights activist Jesse Jackson, all newcomers to District of Columbia politics, were victorious at the polls. Dixon won the Democratic mayoral nomination, Norton won her bid to the House of Representatives, and Jackson won his bid to become the District's “statehood senator”—a newly created office devised by the Washington city council to help lobby Congress for the district's statehood. Dixon distinguished herself early in the campaign when she called for Mayor Marion Barry's resignation. She vowed to use a shovel, not a broom, to clean up after the scandal that plagued Barry's administration. Dixon also promised to cut 2,000 senior municipal jobs. Norton, the former chairperson of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), won a narrow victory. She had to overcome a late disclosure that she had failed to file city income taxes since 1982. Norton succeeded former representative Walter Fauntroy. Jackson's victory proved he could win elective office and gave him a platform to lobby for D.C. statehood.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.