
Gov. Maura Healey (center) shows off a proclamation commemorating Juneteenth at an event with members of the Governor’s Advisory Council on Black Empowerment, in the Governor’s Ceremonial Office in the Massachusetts State House, June 1.Crowded into her ceremonial office with Black leaders from across the state, June 18, Gov. Maura Healey drew their attention to the Massachusetts 54th Regiment Memorial on the Boston Common below.
To the assembled members of her Advisory Council on Black Empowerment, Healey referenced the bronze tableau of one of the first Black regiments of the American Civil War, upon which she said she looks out at every day when she enters her office.
“I’m just reminded of people who were sent forth by a governor, at that time, to fight the war against slavery, people whose own freedom was not actualized,” she said of the monument, which stands across from the State House.
That invocation was part of remarks at a commemoration of Juneteenth with the council, which she established by executive
order in early 2023, and which interfaces with the state’s Black
communities to act in an advisory role to the governor on issues around
economic prosperity and wellbeing for the state’s Black residents.
Healey
said she wanted the event to recognize how the Black community has led
the nation forward, as well as how the Council on Black Empowerment has,
she said, supported state efforts to advance the principles of equality
and opportunity.
“When
our values are under attack and people are trying to take us backwards
and remove people from the table and whitewash websites and everything
else, it is just more important than ever that we lean in, and we do
that leaning on all of you,” she said in her remarks.
For Pratt Wiley, president
and CEO at The Partnership, Inc. and a member of the council, it was a
moment to celebrate “what the holiday really means.”
“It’s
about the difference between words and deeds, right?” Pratt asked. “We
don’t celebrate the Emancipation Proclamation; we celebrate Juneteenth.
And this is a room where the deed is getting done. Where the walk is
being walked.”
Healey, in her remarks, talked, too, about the need for action over words.
“We know that, nationally,
there are people who want to take us backward,” Healey said. “We know
that progress doesn’t start with proclamations.”
Wiley said he sees action taking place across the state.
“There’s
a lot of bluster coming out of Washington, but there’s a lot of
substance on the ground,” Wiley said. “That should give us all
confidence.”
Nicole
Obi, president and CEO of the Black Economic Council of Massachusetts
and a member of the council, said she was pleased to see Healey and Lt.
Gov. Driscoll celebrate the holiday with the proclamation.
“I
would say that that didn’t happen in state houses across the country,”
Obi said. “So I was happy that it happened here in Massachusetts, and
that the governor and lieutenant governor remain committed to equity and
inclusion.”
The
importance of the moment stuck with Healey, too. Matching a tone and
message that she’s held since the reelection of President Donald Trump
in November, Healey said the celebration is especially important given
the federal pushback against diversity, equity and inclusion.
“What
is within our control as a community? As a state?” Healey asked. “What
can we act on and move on, especially in the face of the challenges? And
then what do we also have to resist and fight that is coming at us? And
we know there is a lot coming at us.”
Driscoll,
too, spoke of the role the state can play in continuing to advance
equity for communities that need support in the current political
climate.
“We’re
putting our thumb on the scale for folks who have been marginalized or
economically disadvantaged,” she said. “That’s what our role is here, to
make sure that we’re doing the best we can for the least among us who
need it the most.”
She
pointed, as example, to efforts like those in the housing bond bill
passed last year to decrease disparities in homeownership rates, or
workforce development efforts to diversify sectors like the life
sciences.
The importance of celebrating Juneteenth, Obi said, continues despite changes in the federal administration.
“The
fact is, it’s Juneteenth,” Obi said. “It is a holiday to commemorate a
historical event, and that doesn’t change because of who’s in office.”
The
holiday passed without acknowledgement from Trump, though in a post on
his social media platform, Truth Social, he said he thinks there are
“too many non-working holidays.”
Like
the governor, Driscoll, too, voiced the administration’s support for
efforts against “slings and arrows” coming from the federal
administration in a state that she said has always championed progress.
“We’re going to stand strong in Massachusetts,” she said. “We’re not afraid to say diversity, equity and inclusion.”
Juneteenth, Healey said, is a moment in particular to embrace that.
“Juneteenth
inspires us,” Healey said in her remarks. “It motivates us to keep
going and to keep moving forward and never back down.”