Familiar names aren’t enough. Candidates should earn your vote

Drawing on a famous lyric from Janet Jackson's "Control," Ryan Turner argues that voters should reject political complacency and evaluate every candidate—incumbent and newcomer alike—based on recent accomplishments and meaningful community service rather than name recognition. He urges Baltimore residents to research their ballots, ask tough questions and treat their votes as leverage to hold elected officials accountable. The post Familiar names aren’t enough. Candidates should earn your vote appeared first on AFRO American Newspapers.

Familiar names aren’t enough. Candidates should earn your vote

By Ryan Turner 

On her 1986 breakout album “Control,” Janet Jackson asked an important question that remains a staple of our cultural lexicon: “What Have You Done for Me Lately?”

Ryan Turner, a candidate for state delegate in Maryland’s District 41, encourages voters to look beyond familiar names and demand accountability and results from candidates seeking public office. CREDIT: Courtesy photo

At first listen, it was a simple question layered over an energetic beat. But the question she was asking was more complex. Janet was calling out complacency. A man who once pursued her and won her affection stopped showing effort. He got comfortable. He assumed past performance guaranteed future loyalty. 

Sound familiar? 

As Election Day approaches, I keep hearing Janet’s question in my head, not just for other candidates on the ballot, but for myself too. Yes, I’m running in District 41. But I write this first as a son of Baltimore. 

Our city stands at a turning point. Baltimore is building momentum. Crime is decreasing. Development is growing. Communities are organizing. People still believe this city can become safer, stronger and more equitable. 

But progress only lasts when voters demand it. 

Too many of us put elections on autopilot. We vote for familiar names, faces or slogans without fully interrogating whether those individuals are still delivering for the people they serve. Familiarity does not automatically equal commitment to community interest. Longevity in office is not the same thing as impact. 

So voters need to ask harder questions. 

If someone already holds office, what have they actually delivered lately? What vote did they cast that improved your daily life? Did they help lower costs? Improve schools? Increase public safety? Expand opportunity? 

Not rhetoric. Not hashtags. Not photo ops. Results. 

And new candidates should face scrutiny too. A campaign speech means very little without a track record of service. Before someone gets a title, what have they already done for the community? Who have they helped when no election was on the horizon? 

Research your ballot. Study records. Ask questions. Challenge assumptions. Make politicians earn your trust instead of automatically receiving it. 

Your vote is not a favor you give politicians. It is leverage. 

Use it. Take your vote off autopilot. Take control. For all voters.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the writer and not necessarily those of the AFRO.

The post Familiar names aren’t enough. Candidates should earn your vote appeared first on AFRO American Newspapers.