Black women have saved democracy, led movements and carried entire communities only to be thanked with silence, sidelining and burnout.
Sasha Legette was done with that.
What began as a lingering thought in the aftermath of Breonna Taylorโs death and the 2024 election cycle that felt like a slap in the face to Black womenโs political labor has grown into a thriving organization called Black Girl Caucus.
โIt wasnโt just disappointing,โ said Legette, the founder and executive director of Black Girl Caucus (BGC). โWe showed up. We turned out. But when the decisions were made, our voices were ignored. I was tired of watching Black women pour into everyone else and have nothing poured back into us.โ
BGC is an unapologetic space where Black women can lead freely, build power collectively and move with joy and clarity. From its leadership lab, โWe Lead,โ to its โempowerHer Networkโ and speaker series, BGC offers tools for political influence, career growth and community transformation.
Legette was raised in a union-rooted household in Flint, Michigan. As a child, she marched on picket lines. After graduating from Clark Atlanta University and the University of Georgia School of Law, she taught high school social studies in Atlanta.
She quickly became an advocate for her students, organizing parents and demanding basic resources like textbooks. Her passion for advocacy followed her into law school, where she routinely called out racial disparities and inequities on campus, even when it meant standing alone.
โI didnโt know it was organizing then,โ she said. โI just knew I couldnโt stay silent.โ
After moving to Houston, Legette co-founded Pure Justice, a local nonprofit focused on grassroots criminal justice reform. She later helped expand the Workers Defense Project in Houston, advocating for workersโ rights and pushing policy reforms. All of that work laid the foundation for what would become BGC.
That vision drew Genesis Draper, the Harris County Chief Public Defender, to the organization. Draper is the first Black woman to hold the role and the first woman, period. BGC represents something long overdue for her. Itโs an intentional space for collaboration, restoration and leadership development.
โI honestly couldnโt even conceptualize what the organization was until I stepped into that room,โ Draper said. โWeโre so used to not centering our needs that it was almost foreign to feel that kind of space, vulnerable, joyful, powerful.โ
Draper, a native of Longview, comes from a family of public servants. Her father was a preacher and educator and her mother was an entrepreneur and city employee.
โIt was instilled in us early to use your talent to serve others,โ she said.
Today, her sisters work in education and social work, continuing the familyโs legacy.
But even with decades of experience and purpose, Draper admits the work can feel heavy, especially when Black women are constantly navigating leadership as โfirsts.โ
โThereโs a fatigue that comes with breaking barriers,โ she said. โBut being in that BGC space reminded me weโre not alone. Weโre still in the fight and weโre fighting for each other this time.โ
The organization combines policy strategy with emotional restoration, community building and cultural affirmation. Its upcoming โWe Choose Usโ campaign will gather data from Black women across Houston to define the top issues they want political candidates to address.
โWeโre not here to be tokenized or exploited,โ Legette said. โWe canโt sit around waiting for people to recognize our leadership. We lead. We always have. Now, weโre just doing it out loud.โ
