Black Lives Matter Open Letter to the Board of the Women’s March

January 15, 2020

To the Board and Staff of the Women’s March,

As we approach the 4th Annual Women’s March this Saturday, and especially given our interactions with Women’s March staff and leadership over the last month, it has become apparent, again, that all of our efforts to call you in have failed. You have failed both to fulfill your agreements to acknowledge the harm you have caused, and to complete the reparations you have previously committed to. This failure is clearly evident in your planning of this year’s March, as you are continuing to ignore the communities in DC in your practice, when you claim to be standing in solidarity with us in your words. We have attempted, repeatedly, to call you into more accountability and to actively restore the relationship with us and the communities we work with.

On December 27, 2018 we sent you this incredibly important email which carefully detailed the history of harms perpetuated by the Women’s March and those associated with the organization. Some of these harms included a failure to center DC, the continuous exclusion of local Black Trans women, and the permanent damage done to the local ability to organize. We continue to impress upon you that more than one thing can be centered at a time, and poly-centrism is essential in this work. In this instance:

“D.C. is more than Congress and the White House. It is more than the DOJ and the National Mall. For large mobilizations that come into the District, this means holding the reality of D.C. as both the nation’s capital, the center of empire, a necessary place for national protests, and home to real life human beings with important local issues. Local D.C. is a domestic colony and the actions of national organizers have to recognize that.”

And we’ve said, “Here in D.C., these unstrategic mass mobilizations distract from local organizing, often overlook the Black people who actually live here and even result in tougher laws against demonstration being passed locally.”

Last year we worked closely with Rachel Carmona, Tamika Mallory, and Linda Sarsour. This work was facilitated by DC Action Lab (who pushed Tamika and Linda to meet with us). Outside of the public gaze, in meetings and calls, we made some progress that included this public letter, written by the Women’s March. Even though there was no apology or recognition of harms included in this letter, as the agreement was that they would be detailed in a second letter, the Women’s March did state:

“We commit to being intentional about reaching out to local BLM chapters and other local organizations to understand their needs and to hear how we can ensure our work in their cities is not a burden but an opportunity for amplification and collaboration.”

We want to be very clear, the Women’s March failed to fulfill this commitment to us and to other BLM chapters. BLM Los Angeles has also experienced the same failure to reach out. To that end, it was particularly frustrating to come across a picture of one of our organizers’ car and our contingent in the local DC MLK Parade being used to promote this year’s March on Instagram, knowing that you did not continue with the process we agreed to nor reach out to us about this year’s march at all.

The organizers, advocates, DC residents, and grassroots organizations we are in community with were very skeptical last year, even after the public letter from the Women’s March. We took a lot of personal hits, including having our politics deeply challenged as a result of us publicly working with you, agreeing to speak at the 2019 rally, and marching with you. At great risk to her own credibility, one of our Core Organizers April Goggans, did a radio interview shortly after the beginning of the accountability process, where she publicly named that there seemed to be a new path forward for the Women’s March that was intersectional, inclusive, and responsive to local organizers.

We had a call later with Carmen Perez, National Co-Chair. During the call Carmen agreed to write a public apology letter that would speak to the harms we had relayed, as well as specifically address her role in talking to DC organizers during the Justice League’s March 2 Justice in 2015. She was also supposed to address her remarks on Angela Rye’s podcast on July 9, 2017, when she publicly disparaged DC organizers by insinuating that they are comparable to COINTELPRO and agitators. Carmen never sent or posted this letter. In fact, we hadn’t heard from Carmen since that call, until she reached out to April Goggans via email on January 6, 2020. This is not the only apology letter that the Women’s March committed to writing but then failed to send. At our two week debrief after the 2019 Women’s March, you committed to sending a detailed apology letter that acknowledged past harms. It has now been a year and you have not released the letter or completed any of the other steps you committed to during that debrief.

You have been planning this year’s March for the better part of 4 months but AGAIN waited until December to reach out to BLMDC. By the time you reached out everything was finished, and you expected us to rush to tell you about specific issues, just so that you could rush to check them off your list. A quick check-in or heads-up to even tell us you were still having a March would have been nice, as we’ve told you that MLK Weekend is a historically busy weekend in DC for local communities and organizers. As we have mentioned in the past, checking in with us and other local folks would allow us to see how we can work together around the impact to public transit for DC residents (most directly impacting Black and brown folks), space, port-a-potties (AGAIN), and more. Not this time. The harms you are perpetuating now have not changed, and clearly the Women’s March has not either.

As always, in building the world we want, we remain committed to continuing to walk in our values and principles when it comes to co-creating accountability. BLM DC is led entirely by Black femmes and we want to name that we will not be putting further emotional or other labor into this process until the Women’s March fulfills the commitments it made last year at our two-week debrief. We look forward to seeing the Women’s March Board and Staff take public accountability, make public apologies, and take public steps to repair harm.

Toward Liberation,


Black Lives Matter DC

Twitter @DMVBlackLives
Instagram: blacklivesmatterdc
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9 comments to Black Lives Matter Open Letter to the Board of the Women’s March

  • Toya

    Hello, i just read this article and i am a little confused. I am a Ward 8 resident (just to say). Demanding respect is not an option here. The Woman’s March clearly canceled BLM out and maybe because of demands that BLM express. Now, doing business with people should not be demanded or aggressively expressed. I have heard people actually say how BLM is some crap, useless, their attitudes are horrible, and all they do is demand and not really put out work but preach a bunch of words (no action). Sadly, other organizations seem to think BLM is a joke. It seems to me that BLM should move on from the Women’s March (not holding any animosity) but go a different route from them. And maybe over some time, the two organizations can work together. BLM should really not give this too much focus because again, They have expressed their true colors and they are not doing anything for the Black communities.

  • Liane

    Hello Toya,

    I agree with a lot of what you say. I have to disagree strongly with the notion that BLM is some crap and that they don’t do anything. I’m not sure that those are your sentiments or if you’re just quoting others. Either way, I disagree. Having just posted four events that BLM is engaged in this upcoming week on this website, I can’t say they aren’t doing anything.

    I do agree that they probably shouldn’t be too worried about the Women’s March. I understand that they really have to make the effort to be included because the Women’s March has such a huge platform and because BLM is a serious organization that does actually do things, they can’t afford to turn up the opportunity to bring their concerns to a national audience. I think they were genuinely disappointed when they didn’t hear from the Women’s March until just about everything was already set.

    I also think that the Women’s March missed a big opportunity by not bringing them in sooner. Organizing is difficult work. BLM is active each and every day providing support to families and communities who have lost loved ones to police brutality and intra-community violence. They are working to get legislation passed that would make the city more accountable to the needs of under-resourced communities, not just with regard to the police but with regard to housing, education, social services, etc. The folks organizing the Women’s March could learn a lot from them and if BLM were on the stage with them, they’d be able to spread that knowledge nationwide. I know there are a lot of organizations that the Women’s March has worked to include, but it’s crazy that they didn’t make a bigger effort with Black Lives Matter.

    Thanks for your comment Toya. I’m a Ward 7 resident myself. I hope that you’ll get on BLM-DC’s mailing list. Maybe we’ll run into each other at one of their events. Here’s the link . http://www.blacklivesmatterdmv.org/join-the-movement/

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  • Liane

    I’m going to add this link to the bottom of April’s open letter. It’s certainly relevant. Thanks for the tip.

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