Seattle council member touts ‘Black budget,’ calls for Black residents to form ‘most powerful political party’
The Seattle City Council president said she works with two budgets — her district’s and "the Black budget" — and urged Black residents to unite as "the most powerful political...
By Fox News · Fox News
The Seattle City Council president said she works with two budgets — her district’s and "the Black budget" — and urged Black residents to unite as "the most powerful political party" in Seattle. Joy Hollingsworth, president of the Seattle City Council and representative of District 3, told attendees at the State of Africatown 2026 conference how she has advocated for the "Black budget" to be reflected in the city's general budget. The public town hall, focused on advancing Seattle’s Black community, was held in late February, but Hollingsworth's remarks were resurfaced by Seattle talk show host Jason Rantz . "So, I got two budgets every time I go to council member Dan Strauss every year. I have a district three budget and then a black budget," Hollingsworth told the audience. Hollingsworth's remarks came just days before Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson ordered city agencies to cut their budgets for next year by 5% to 10%. Seattle is facing a projected budget deficit of $140 million for the 2026 fiscal year. KEY TRUMP AGENCY UNLEASHES PROBE ON BLUE STATE OVER POTENTIAL RACE-BASED MORTGAGE AID: 'DEI IS DEAD' During the address, Hollingsworth talked about how she assembled roughly 70 Black residents to testify last year on the city's budget, dubbing it "Black Budget Day." "It is important that they see us, that they hear us, that we just don't show up for certain things that we are down here advocating for us," Hollingsworth said of Black Budget Day. "There are political parties in Seattle and I believe that if black people come to together, we can be the most powerful political party in the city of Seattle. We have to coalesce our power." Rantz invited Hollingsworth on his radio show to explain what she meant by the term "Black budget," suggesting that whether she meant it as a literal budget or a term used for political branding, it's still a "problem." WHITE DEVELOPER SUES BALTIMORE MAYOR, CITY COUNCIL CLAIMING HE WAS FIRED BECAUSE OF HIS RACE "But we’d rightly call out…