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Kierra Johnson To Be The First Black Executive Director Of The U.S. National LGBTQ Task Force

Kierra Johnson is about to make history as the first Black Executive Director in the 50-year existence of the U.S. National LGBTQ Task Force. Longtime Executive Director Rea Carey will be stepping down from her role in early 2021. 

Founded in 1973, The Task Force is dedicated to education, research and advocacy work and is known for campaigns like Queer the Census. It also hosts the annual Creating Change Conference.

“I couldn’t be more thrilled and excited to take on this role,” Johnson told ‘LGBTQ Nation’ in an exclusive interview done before the announcement went public.


Originally from Georgia, Johnson has been with the Task Force for almost three years, first as a member of the Board of Directors and its National Action Council and now as Deputy Executive Director. Before she joined the organisation, she was the Executive Director of URGE—Unite for Reproductive & Gender Equity.

While she is excited to lead the Task Force into its next chapter, she also knows it will be a big undertaking.

“We, like many organizations right now, are in the process of figuring out what it means to serve our community in the middle of a pandemic, in the middle of an economic downturn, and in the middle of a crisis of overt and covert racism, and I think at the center of that is focusing on racial equity as part of our work even more deeply,” she said.

She feels emotional, she added, about the fact that amidst all of this, she will also be the first Black person to lead the organisation.

“I come from a long line of Black women leaders and advocates and organizers and freedom fighters, and I want to do that legacy proud,” Johnson said. “I want to make my people proud in every sense of the word, and I know it’s going to be a challenge. Everything about being out loud at this time as a Black woman comes with risk, and I’m up for the challenge, and I know I’m not doing it alone.”

“Not only do I have the support of my own colleagues and the board of directors at the Task Force, but the support of all my communities,” she continued. “Black folks across social justice sectors. Women who have been deep in the work for over twenty years in women’s rights and abortion rights work, so I know I’m really going to lean on those folks.”

“And I do understand the weight of carrying this forward, and I don’t claim to do it alone. I don’t want to, I don’t need to, and the best can only come from working in collaboration with folks across our community.”

In February, when she officially takes on the role, Johnson hopes to begin deepening relationships between the Task Force and other activists and leaders beyond the LGBT+ community.

“That’s how the movement is growing. That’s how activists are working. They’re not siloed,” Johnson said. “I want to be a ‘household name’ across social justice movements, so really [focus on] building those relationships.”

With the November 3rd election coming up, Johnson added it is even more crucial to spread the message that LGBT+ rights are inextricably entwined with other movements.

“The reality is all of our wants and dreams and needs are wrapped up in political power,” she posited. “A lot of the work the Task Force does is explain that the issues that affect everyday people affect queer people.”

She wants people to see the Task Force as not only an LGBT+ organisation, but as a democracy organisation, a leadership development organisation, and a racial equity organisation. As a reproductive justice expert, she added that this cause will also remain crucial to the Task Force.

“I want to center the experiences and knowledge and magic of women of color. Period,” she said.  “You’ve got Breonna Taylor, and then you think about Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and then you think about the fact that Betsy DeVos is withholding millions of dollars from a school district because they will not deny trans young people participating in organized sports, and for me, the connection is clear: control of bodies.”

“It is the control of our sexuality. It is the assumptions that some people get to make about our identities and then place judgments on whether or not we should live or die or experience joy.”

“So [I plan on] being intentional about raising the profile of women of color and putting the spotlight on the unique ways disenfranchisement and oppression looks,” she continued. “I think we can come up with some new creative, impactful solutions that will actually benefit all of us.”

Above all else, Johnson said she wants those engaged with the organisation to know that she is headed into the position with a bridge-building mindset and that she is ready to roll up her sleeves and do the work.

“I’m in it to win it. Take me to a red state. Take me to the Bible belt, take me to the rust belt, [or] sweet home Alabama, I am down. Let’s do this,” she ended. “I am ready to be a bridge in whatever way, and I want to bring together the not so usual suspects in a powerful way to leverage power for our communities. We deserve it, and we need it.”





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