As filing deadlines pass and campaigns heat up, integrity, financial discipline, and protection of Black institutions must outweigh polish and performance.

(ANNAPOLIS – March 1, 2026) – As time proceeds unforgivingly, one cannot help but notice the tendencies of the human heart — what it truly desires when it says it wants to run for office.

We have seen this movie before.

The seasoned politician grows comfortable in the seat. A young, ambitious challenger arrives — polished, articulate, camera-ready. The upset victory. The celebration. And eventually, the cycle repeats. Yesterday’s reformer becomes today’s establishment.

But beyond the speeches and tailored suits, beyond the buzzwords — “underserved communities,” “MBE,” “education,” “seniors,” “the environment,” “public safety” — what does it all truly mean?

Campaign language inspires. Governance requires discipline.

Public office is not designed to make one wealthy. It is designed to test one’s character. And when individuals enter office with financial instability, unresolved personal affairs, or fragile discipline, the temptation to misuse power grows stronger. That is not cynicism — that is human nature.

Politics is supposed to be about public service. Not personal enrichment. Not ego validation. Not social media performance.

Too many times, we have watched elected officials stumble over matters that were avoidable — sloppy bookkeeping, undisclosed conflicts, blurred ethical lines. And for Black elected officials, the scrutiny is not theoretical. The microscope is real. Fair or not, the standard is higher.

Caesar’s wife must be above suspicion.

You know your books must be straight.
You know conflicts must be disclosed.
You know when to recuse yourself.
You know arrogance precedes the fall.

No matter how polished the speech. No matter how viral the clip. No matter how carefully curated the image — eventually, each of us must account for our stewardship. In the quiet hours, when the noise dies down and we are staring at the ceiling asking what just happened, there is no audience. Only conscience.

Maryland has entered a new statewide election cycle. Filing deadlines have passed. A new cadre of next-generation candidates has stepped forward.

Congratulations to each of them.

Running for office is among the boldest acts in a democracy. It is a decathlon — messaging, fundraising, coalition building, endurance, resilience. Campaigns reveal a candidate’s mettle long before Election Day does.

But voters, too, must evolve.

We must look beyond polish. Beyond wardrobe. Beyond slogans.

We must ask:
Who are you when no one is watching?
How do you manage your own affairs?
What discipline governs your ambition?
Are you seeking service — or status?

And there is another uncomfortable truth we must confront.

Whenever something happens to a Black elected official, many of us instinctively cry racism. And yes — racism exists. Structural bias exists. Disparate scrutiny exists.

But too often, the obstruction is not coming from outside the community.

Too often, it is internal.

Black people blocking Black institutions.
Black people undermining Black leadership.
Black people withdrawing support from what is working.

That is not accusation. That is accountability.

Over the weekend, I received an email from Edwin Avent, CEO of Baltimore Collegiate School for Boys. He posed a hard question:

What happens to boys when a place that actually works for them disappears?

Not a generic school.
Not a one-size-fits-all system.

A place built intentionally for how boys learn, grow, and heal.

At Baltimore Collegiate, boys receive:
Structure instead of chaos.
Brotherhood instead of isolation.
High expectations instead of lowered bars.

Take that away and the cost is real.

Lost momentum.
Lost confidence.
Lost futures.

That question should sit heavy on all of us.

Because sometimes we fight personalities instead of protecting institutions.

Sometimes we politic over power instead of preserving what works.

Sometimes ego enters the room before stewardship does.

It is easy to chant “support Black leadership.”
It is harder to sustain Black infrastructure.

Schools. Businesses. Media outlets. Community institutions.

They do not survive on applause. They survive on discipline, funding, and collective responsibility.

If we are serious about accountability in politics, we must also be serious about accountability in community.

Leadership is not just about holding office.
It is about holding the line for what works.

The community is no longer asleep.

We are watching.
Not with cynicism — but with expectation.

Because leadership is not about the moment you win.
It is about how you carry the weight once you do.

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