Emerging Leaders participant Marie Franklin running for mayor of East St. Louis, Illinois
March 2, 2023
Marie Franklin attended a virtual, two-day Emerging Leaders training in February 2022 for people in the Great Lakes region (Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio), and she is now running for mayor of East St. Louis, Illinois.
Watch highlights from her campaign announcement:
Franklin, 60, is a lifelong East St. Louis resident. She previously served as an organizer with The United Congregations of Metro-East. From 1986-1997, she worked for the Illinois State Police, where she made history as the first Black female trooper in the patrol division for southern Illinois. She’s also an advocate for pre-trial detainees and worked in 2021 to get the Pretrial Fairness Act passed, which went into effect this year and made Illinois the first state in the nation to completely get rid of the cash bail system in favor of a pretrial release system.
“My experience as an organizer has taught me that the solutions to our problems are in the hands of those most impacted, and that is the lens that I will operate from,” Franklin said at her campaign launch.
Franklin tells JustLeadershipUSA, “The training that I received from JLUSA helped to prepare me for this journey.”
The consolidated election for mayor of East St. Louis, Illinois, takes place April 4, 2023.
Your donation to JLUSA empowers directly impacted people.
Thank you so much for supporting our mission here at JLUSA! Your donation helps to support our network of leaders working to dismantle oppressive systems and uplift people and families impacted by mass incarceration across the country.
All charitable donations made to JLUSA are fully tax deductible, as allowable by the IRS.
Related posts: Statement From Reuben Jones, #CLOSEthecreek Campaign Coordinator, on House of Correction Population Dropping to Zero JLUSA leaders holding D.C. “hackathon” for returning citizens JLUSA President and CEO attends White House Convening on Equity JLUSA leader Tarra Simmons first among five formerly incarcerated elected to state legislatures since 2021
Related posts: A New Normal in Philadelphia: A Dispatch from the Field A Struggle to Survive: Motherhood Post-Incarceration The Sleeping Giant Vidal’s Corner Episode 1: Ending the Gang Database in New York City
Related posts: I want to leverage technology to end mass incarceration. I Believe in Approaching Things from a Place of Possibility. If We Lose Hope, Then We Have Nothing. No Two Stories are Exactly the Same, But Everyone is Coming to the Table To know I’ve given a voice to people who consider themselves voiceless […]
Related posts: I want to leverage technology to end mass incarceration. I Believe in Approaching Things from a Place of Possibility. If We Lose Hope, Then We Have Nothing. No Two Stories are Exactly the Same, But Everyone is Coming to the Table To know I’ve given a voice to people who consider themselves voiceless […]
Related posts: I want to leverage technology to end mass incarceration. I Believe in Approaching Things from a Place of Possibility. If We Lose Hope, Then We Have Nothing. No Two Stories are Exactly the Same, But Everyone is Coming to the Table To know I’ve given a voice to people who consider themselves voiceless […]
Email Subscription
Site Search
FAQ
Send Us Email
X
Welcome to our website
×
The nation’s prisons and jails have been in crisis long before COVID-19. This is because most correctional facilities do not have plans in place to deal with any kind of emergency, be it a pandemic, a flood or a cyber attack.
This must change.
Directly impacted people are the best voices to help change our country’s discriminatory policies. We have policy solutions to appropriately manage the range of disasters that impact correctional facilities nationwide, uplift the dignity and humanity of incarcerated people, and decarcerate the United States.
Join us, and tell your elected officials to adopt these solutions, now.